April 24, 2009 Friday
Updated

April 24, 2009
Boom ahead for mobile Web
Mr Cerf (left) is the vice president and 'chief Internet evangelist' of online search engine Google. -- ST PHOTO: SONIA TAN CR
MADRID - AFTER a slow start, mobile Web access has finally taken off, thanks in large part to better technology, and it will drive growth in Internet use in the future, industry leaders say.

'More people in the world will have their first interaction with the Internet with mobile than with laptop,' said Internet co-founder Vinton Cerf at a five-day Web conference which wrapped up on Friday in Madrid.

There are about three and a half billion mobile telephones in the world, and a growing proportion of them are equipped to access the Internet, he added.

Mr Cerf is the vice president and 'chief Internet evangelist' of online search engine Google, which has ramped up its mobile applications since it launched its own mobile operating system called Android two years ago.

The explosion in the number of mobile phones with the capacity to access the Internet will enable millions of people in developing nations who cannot afford computers to go online for the first time, said one of the inventors of the World Wide Web, Tim Berners-Lee.

'The move to mobile access is very important as mobile devices are the first way that people in developing countries get their first contact with the Web,' said the British-born Massachusetts Institute of Technology computer scientist.

Just five per cent of Africans currently surf the Web, compared to 23 per cent of the entire population of the globe, the United Nations' International Telecommunications Union said in a report last month.

While analysts have long argued that a mass market exists for mobile Internet, difficulties in viewing Web pages on the small screens of telephones, PDAs and other portable devices have until recently dampened consumer demand.

But the emergence of portable devices with better user interfaces, beginning with the launch of Apple's iPhone in June 2007, has vastly boosted the appeal of mobile Web access.

'The iPhone was a major breakthrough. The ability to zoom in and out made it easier to have access to bigger Web pages,' said Andreas Girgensohn, a principal scientist at leading US multimedia research laboratory FXPAL. -- AFP

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