Monday’s Tech Tidbits-AT&T loves Wi-Fi!

Looking for a Wi-Fi hotspot? Well according to AT&T the number has been growing by leaps and bounds as users made 301.9 million AT&T Wi-Fi connections in the third quarter. The biggest growth areas? Stadiums and hospitality facilities.

Motorola Mobility seeks to reestablish Razr with the new Droid Razr, an LTE Android smartphone expected to be released next month. Can the company regain its pre-iPhone glory?

I feel old this morning. Apple’s iPod turned 10 years old last Sunday.

Google delivered Ice Cream Sandwich last week replete with a host of features-the first product with the new OS is Samsung’s Galaxy Nexus. I wonder how developers like it compared to the rival iOS or earlier Android versions?

Looks like Samsung’s Galaxy Tab 7 Plus tablet is headed to the US. Expect it to cost around $400 for the 16GB version and be available Nov 13th from Best Buy and Amazon, according to Gizmodo.

Apple’s iPad market share has peaked. Apple’s iPad market share is growing. Who do you believe? Speaking of bad iPad news stories are emerging that you can partially hack an iPad2 with a simple magnet.

Microsoft says that it will target the mid-market smartphone segment with future releases of its Windows-based phones. Rumor is that a platform code-named “Tango” is in the works, following up on its current “Mango” release.

Continued bad news for BlackBerry– a study by Enterprise Management Associates shows that 30% of RIM users in enterprises with 10,000 employees or more plans to switch to a different platform.

Modevity Confirms Rise of the iPad Playbook in the NFL

Could Darrelle Revis be even better if the New York Jets used Modevity ARALOC Sports Platform?

A team’s NFL playbook is its lifeblood. And at least two teams are using iPads for competitive advantage. They’ve tapped a rising, 20-person company in Pennsylvania named Modevity LLC to handle encryption of data and rights management to distribute playbooks and scouting video to players, and to instantly turn off access to the playbook if a player is cut or traded.

Modevity in huddle with NFL’s early adopters

Modevity LLC specializes in digital rights management, and it has been winning business in its seven-year history by distributing such data as sensitive documents to board members at publicly traded companies and genome information to biologists at life sciences companies.  Its platform, called ARALOC, eschews a Web portal, and all its risks. All data, whether it is a text document, audio or video is encrypted at the server, and passed to the client application. Sophisticated rights management controls on the server side ensure only the right applications have access. That reduces the likelihood data will be pirated during distribution, prevents the data from being stored locally on a mobile device, and allows access to be turned off the instant it is necessary.

Seeing that a professional sport team’s playbook was every bit as sensitive as corporate board materials or advanced medical research, Modevity recently branched expanded into sports. To date, its foray is wildly successful. The NHL’s Phoenix Coyotes this week officially confirmed that it is using Modevity’s ARALOC Sports Platform. And, now, Modevity co-founder Tom Canova confirmed exclusively to MobileSportsReport.com that at least two NFL teams are using ARALOC to better prepare for football games. 

“I don’t think any team would argue with us that securing the playbook is first and foremost a concern of everyone in the league,” Canova said. “We are very confident we have the most secure mobile content platform out there.”

The Baltimore Ravens, Tampa Bay Buccaneers and Atlanta Falcons are reportedly using iPads to distribute team data in 2011, but if your favorite NFL team isn’t on that list don’t be discouraged. Canova would not name any NFL team as a client during an interview with MobileSportsReport.com, citing confidentiality agreements. And some teams distribute data via iPads without Modevity, which is risky business. In those scenarios, team officials load information manually on an iPad, which means that it could easily fall into the hands of Bill Belichick or another rival, if it were lost or stolen.  

Canova believes that the digital playbook will quickly spread across professional sports, and that ARALOC Sports Platform will be at the center of the mix.

“I don’t care if it is the NBA, NHL or NFL,” Canova said. “Everyone is trying to figure out in an automated process how (to get) their content distributed to a mobile device like an iPad.”

Playbook paradigm shift  

What’s happening with Modevity’s ARALOC Sports Platform is a paradigm shift in the way teams prepare for competition. Previously, teams relied on playbooks, and there were fines between $5,000 to $10,000 if you lost it. Using Modevity ARALOC Sports Platform, players can access digital versions of a team’s playbook on mobile devices, including Android devices. The players can annotate the plays with commentary, and share those comments with coaches, other players, or any other approved playbook on the system.

Some NFL teams are doing similar things with iPads but they don’t use ARALOC Sports Platform. Others are still distributing data via DVDs. Unless content is being distributed in an encrypted system with digital rights management, the information could be pirated, stolen or misappropriated, Canova pointed up.

“We are saying to the teams that you are at risk from the standpoint of content security,” Canova said. “You as a team have to be concerned that your playbook ewill get in the hands of some of your rivals.”

Interactive Scouting Reports

No professional sport relies on game film more heavily than the NFL, and ARALOC Sports Platform includes an application designed to maximize a team’s potential in the arena of scouting. All NFL teams have video production studios in their team facilities, and once film is cut it can be distributed using ARALOC Sports Platform to player devices. In fact, ARALOC includes a “telestration” feature, which allows coaches and players to mark up the film, and redistribute it to other approved team members.

So, if New York Jets cornerback Darrelle Revis — already one of the NFL’s most video-prepared players on any given Sunday — wanted a practice squad player to mimic a specific move San Diego Chargers’ wide receiver Vincent Jackson makes at the line of scrimmage, Revis could mark the film and send it to the practice squad player responsible for emulating Jackson. That’s a whole lot easier than sending an email, trying to explain it over the phone, or describing it on the practice field.

WHO REALLY USES ARALOCK?

Canova would not comment on teams using Modevity, but Fox Radio host Ben Maller previous made a brief mention that the Baltimore Ravens and Atlanta Falcons. Here is what was posted on BenMaller.com:

“The Baltimore Ravens have gotten rid of the old school paper playbook. They’re saving trees by giving players the playbook via on iPad. The National Football Post reports if the iPad is lost or stolen, or the player gets cut or traded, the Ravens have the ability to remotely erase all the information in the playbook. The Falcons have also shifted more to the use of Apple’s iPad.”

Blogger Simon Brown, who publishes Sports HR, reported that the Tampa Bay Buccaneers were using iPads to deliver plays. He was critical of the practice. Here is what he said:

“Sure, it seems like a cool idea for Tampa Bay to have its players download their playbooks to iPads. The problem is, aside from the usual dangers of players losing books or having them stolen, now the team is using a device that can be hacked. It’s great that the team wants to be hip (and green!), but it’s not worth the added danger.”  

Brown’s perspective is reasonable, but he didn’t pick up on the fact that security and digital rights management are involved if your NFL team uses ARALOC, or a similar platform. iPads are hands down the No. 1 tablet device in use by NFL players, and the advantage of being able to distribute up-to-the-minute playbook information and game video to the players at home or on the road — versus having them hang at our a team video facility — far outweigh the risks.

iPads on the sidelines

There are limits to the usefulness of the digital playbook. The NFL bans smartphones and iPads on the sidelines, according to a report on The Atlantic Wire. So, it won’t be until the 2012 NFL season, and would require a rules change, for you to see Modevity ARALOC Sports Platform used in a game situation.

GMs look to expand ARALOC use

It is expected that the 2012 NFL draft class will be evaluated by scouts passing information and annotated information using Modevity ARALOC Sports Platform, Canova said. And team officials are clamoring for Modevity to build applications that make contract negotiations as fail safe as the distribution of game film, Canova said.

“A number of front office executives have told me that they want to use the system in the secure distribution of other forms of confidential content, including content used in contract negotiations,” Canova said. “We’re seeing a lot of future thinking (from our NFL clients), and, as a technology provider, we are always interesting in how a customer might want to use ARALOC.”

Whether Mel Kiper Jr. starts using ARALOC to pass around data with his sources remains to be seen, but its clear that distribution of secure data to mobile devices via sophisticated digital rights management is the wave of the future in the NFL.

Courtesy of Modevity, here’s a diagram of its ARALOC solution:

 

 

 

 

 

 

Friday Grab Bag: Mostly Football Issue

Get your vote in for Straight Outta Stockton
The good folks at Awful Announcing have added a new bad announcer category. For regulars on the site they are already familiar with the “Pammies” named after Pam Ward and given to the worst college football announcer have been joined by a weekly award for the NFL broadcasting corp. The new award is called “Straight Outta Stockton” in honor of Dick Stockton. The winning comment in its first week was “The Lions undefeated season is over… for now” – Scott Hanson (via Real_DWM).


NFL Games DVDs now widely available from NFL Films

Have some gaps in your home library of great games by your favorite NFL team? Well the league has taken steps to fix that by offering the entire NFL Films DVD catalog for the first time. Approximately 115 titles can now be purchased from iTunes, Best Buy Cinema and Vudu as part of a distribution deal between the NFL Films and Vivendi Entertainment. The videos will range from Super Bowls, team histories and a range of classic games. The deal helps NFL Films aggressively push into the home entertainment market for the first time. In the past limited films were available.

Android app market continues to see strong growth
The number of apps available for the Android platform continues to grow, and has reached the half a million market in September, compared to Apple’s iOS 600,000, according to market research firm Research2Guidence and forwarded by readwriteweb. This shows that the huge lead that Apple once enjoyed is getting narrower by the month as a solid influx of apps for the Android continue to hit the market. The one downside for the Android space, according to the report shows that 37% of apps are removed from Androids while 24% for the iOS.



Fox wins TV rights to 2018 and 2022 World Cup

Fox Sports has won the TV rights to the 2018 World Cup to be held in Russia and the 2022 World Cup that is scheduled to be held in Qatar. This gives the sports network all FIFA events from 2015 to 2022. Telemundo won the Spanish language broadcasting rights in the United States. The amount has not yet been announced but the company outbid ESPN and Univision which had the rights to the 2010 and 2014 World Cups, and had gained those broadcasting rights with a $425 million bid. Not sure how well Fox Sports will do here, but ESPN had seemed to be putting an effort in its soccer coverage in the last few years and I now expect it to disappear from the network. My one hope is that Joe Buck does not feature on Fox’s broadcasting team.

Sling Media provides enhanced remote viewing for fans

Sling Media delivers SlingPlayer for Tablets
Paying a bundle to get a sports bundle on your home entertainment unit and not willing to double dip to get it on a mobile device as well? Then maybe Sling Media may have the solution for you in its SlingPlayer platform.

SlingMedia has taken the next step in delivering streaming media to mobile users with the latest release of its $29.99 SlingPlayer platform. The SlingPlayer for tablets is designed to support tablets that run the Android operating system 3.0 or later and enable a user to basically watch home TV while on the go and is an enhancement on its previous offering for Android-based phones.

This is great news for sports fans that are seeking a method to gain access to the packages that they may already be paying for at home while on the road, and is a major step up for Sling Media’s offerings in this space.

There is more to the deal than simply paying $29.99 for the app and suddenly getting all of your home sports and other programming on your Android-based tablet. You must first pony up for a Slingbox device, which start at $180 and go up from there.

The program gives users control as if they were at home, with features that include being able to set a DVR at home, channel surf and browse content while still watching TV anywhere a user has an Internet connection.

The existing SlingPlayer application for Android Phones will continue to work on tablets in “Compatibility Mode” on tablets at no extra charge but it provides video at a much lower resolution than the tablet specific platform.

There is also available a SlingPlayer Mobile offering for Apple’s iPhone and iPads that also provide remote control over home TV and DVR and is available for $29.99

Nielsen Says Men Multitasking with Smartphones, Tablets In Record Numbers to Check Sports

While most experts point to immersive television as the future of the sports viewing, consumers are edging toward the experience slowly. Right now, consumers are mostly multitasking on smartphones and tablets when they sit in front of the television, according to  a recent report from The Nielsen Company.

Nielsen found that 40 percent of tablet and smartphone owners in the United States watch television and use smartphones or tablet devices at the same time on a daily basis.

Checking sports scores ranked higher than checking television listings, couponing or looking up product information with 30 percent of all respondents, 44 percent of males and 17 percent of females saying that’s what they did with their smart phones and tablets when watching television.

Email was the top activity that people engaged in with 60 percent of respondents saying that’s what they did when they used their smartphones or tablets in front of the television.

Sports programmers take note, ZDNet says

According to a ZDNet report, the Nielsen data has a good takeaway for television programmers. ZDNet said the Nielsen data indicates that smartphones and tablets are not much of a threat to television, but it would be a good idea for programmers to continue to experiment with ways to reach the smartphone and tablet audiences, and use the medium to their advantage.

Consumer predicts cable company trouble

A comment by Tmc8tmc on The Nielsen Company’s website predicted a seismic shift:

You’ll find more consumers actually watching tv on the devices themselves through streaming (wifi, not the price gouged so-called unlimited data plans). Cable companies are in trouble.. Their business model will erode starting in 2012 to serious subscription loss by 2015.

Account for mobile, marketing services company says

One spin on the Nielsen data came from integrated content marketing services company Brafton, Inc., which said marketers of all kinds need to pay attention to tablets and smartphones replacing laptops as a primary computing device. It said location-based marketing, which falls squarely in the sweet spot of sports social media, will rise as people rely more heavily on smartphones and tablets for access to the digital domain.

Here is what  Brafton, Inc. said:

The survey results demonstrate that web marketers must ensure their plans account for the growing use of mobile devices. Search marketing campaigns typically include aggressive keyword strategies, and are also tailored to the search algorithms. However, mobile operating systems come with specialized search applications that field searches differently, factoring location into results. SEO strategies must adjust, especially in consumer-facing businesses, to include geographical elements that may drive mobile search traffic

For marketers, keyword strategies must adjust to tailor to on-the-go consumers. While the desktop PC is still the primary access point for the Internet, Brafton reported last month that experts expect this to change by 2015, when the mobile web is primed to reign supreme.

More Nielsen numbers

eReader owners were far less prone to double teaming data and entertainment than smartphone and tablet owners. Just 14 percent reported using their eReader while watching television.

Few consumers are totally abstinent from multitasking. Only 12 percent of tablet owners and 13 percent of smartphone owners say they have never used those devices while watching TV.

 

 

 

 

yap.tv to bring immersive television experience to USA Network

In a deal that could bump up the social media for US Open Tennis and WWE Raw, start-up yap.tv will deliver a branded social TV guide application for NBCUniversal’s USA Network.  

Initially, the deal will focus on such USA Network television shows as “Burn Notice,” “White Collar,” “Suits” and other original programming, but US Open Tennis and WWE Raw are among USA Network’s sports offerings, and could be part of the mix.

yap.tv will deliver to USA Network a branded app for Apple iOS devices that allows people with iPhones, iTouch devices or iPads to interact with a visual TV guide, including seamless integration with Twitter and Facebook. The application could create for USA Network a significant captured audience, who would create buzz for programming and enhance audience, according to a report in The Hollywood Reporter.  The deal follows a report by Nielsen that confirmed a 10 percent lift in social media activity lead to an increase in ratings of roughly 1 percent increase.

By landing USA Network, yap.tv establishes itself as a major player in the market for social TV guide apps for mobile devices. The deal with USA is one of the first times a major television network has tapped an independent company to develop a custom-branded social media application, as most networks prefer to rely on in-house development — a tactic that usually leads to less-than-leading-edge functionality. 

Social media television guides hold huge potential for sports marketers. Simply, if a user base considers any one application the go-to resource for the viewing experience, it unlocks the potential for advertisers and sponsors to present that captured audience with advertising and direct marketing tailored to their current activities and location.

yap.TV is less than two years old, has venture capital backing from Javelin Venture Partners and Bloomberg Capital, and is advised by Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak.  It competes with such companies as AdaptiveBlue, Inc., which developed GetGlue.