Wednesday, August 29, 2007

Mobile Porn TV more accessible

According to MobileCrunch , "There are over 1 million mobile Web sites available for your viewing pleasure." Most of the are probably for mobile porn since most mobile web usage is for mobile sex site search. A problem with mobile browsers is that the bookmarking feature is limited. Moreover, keeping track of multiple site is slow on mobile internet.
Now we can rejoice at the growing number of homepage customization sites designed for mobiles. So you can have your favorite RSS feeds of news and e-mail with mobile porn links on the same home page.
To have your cell phone's homepage optimized for viewing porn we recommend to use MobiSeer. It will let you add Sex On Cell to your start page along with other sites you like to visit. Check out the Mobilerunch review of MobiSeer.

Monday, August 27, 2007

Mobile Video Growing

Around the globe, mobile video usage is growing. Everyone knows that wireless providers are developing their infrastructures in order to accommodate the rapidly growing demand for mobile porn. 3.5G for downloading mobile adult content via HSDPA (high-speed downlink protocol access) is being rolled out ad provides speeds of several megabytes per second. It's great for streaming mobile sex. Cell phone companies just rolled out their 3G networks for mobile multimedia and data but they are already planning moving to 4G. Sprint, for example, is investing heavily into WiMax roll-out. Most carriers, however, are just contemplating so far. T-mobile decided to move from EDGE to 3G just recently because watching mobile TV and mobile sex videos on EDGE is slow. In the near future wireless companies will provide the infrastructure for high quality mobile porn streaming.

HSDPA to Dominate 3G Mobile Broadband Market in Coming Years:

HSDPA and related HSPA technologies will dominate the high-end mobile
broadband market over the next five years, accounting for about 70% of global 3G
deployments, said Juniper Research in a recent forecast.Globally, almost one
third of mobile phone subscribers, or over 1-billion people, will use some kind
of mobile broadband technology by 2012, according to Juniper, driven by strong
demand in North America, Western Europe, and some Asia Pacific markets.