Multimedia services will surpass text messaging this year as the main source of mobile operators’ non-voice revenues in the Asia-Pacific region, industry analyst IDC said yesterday.
Driven by the rise of more technologically advanced handsets, multimedia services should account for 11 percent of total mobile revenues in the region outside of Japan by the end of the year, it said.
Text messaging, or short messaging system (SMS), which has been a major revenue earner for years because of its simplicity, is likely to contribute around 10 percent, IDC said in a press statement.
Ringtones and wallpaper downloads were the early drivers of multimedia mobile services, which now include games, videos, pictures, music clips and other applications.
IDC said text messaging accounted for 10.3 percent of total mobile services revenues last year, with multimedia services contributing 10.1 percent.
“IDC predicts that SMS contribution will plateau at 10 percent for the next few years, while mobile multimedia services will continue to ride on growth trajectory,” the market researcher said.
“Today, the emergence of handsets featuring larger screens and even touch-screen interfaces has pushed the uptake of mobile multimedia services to a new level,” IDC senior research manager Alex Chau said. “This has spurred content and application developers to develop tens of thousands of applications to satisfy this new demand amongst mobile users.”
New mobile handsets come with advanced operating systems and high-speed connectivity.
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