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Ads Go Mobile
- By Kevin Cantera
- Published 01/30/2008
- Music
- Unrated
Kevin Cantera
Author Kevin Cantera, who is a free lance writer in Utah
View all articles by Kevin CanteraAs an increasing number of people opt for Bluetooth-enabled cell phones , advertising agencies and billboard operators are teaming up to create a new form of advertising within the growing sphere of mobile marketing. At the recent Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, Motorola unveiled its new pocket-size media player, the Mobile TV DH01, with a 4.3-inch, high-resolution wide screen that makes TV programs available wherever viewers want to watch them. So what’s the next thing aiming for your high-tech wireless mobile device? Commercials.
Used more broadly in
Bluetooth was named for Harald Bluetooth Gormson -- a 10th-century Danish king who unified the Danes and the Norwegians, according to the information provided by the company at Bluetooth.com. Bluetooth uses short-range radio frequency to unify information from different technologies, such as wirelessly connecting a laptop to a cell phone. Now Clear Channel is teaming up with a New York-based mobile content distributor on a new Bluetooth advertising effort that will test the marketing scheme on wireless Americans. There are already more than 100 sites in operation across the country.
Here's the way it operates: When you have the Bluetooth function on your phone turned on and you walk by a Bluetooth-enabled ad, your phone will suddenly ask if you would like to download some
According to the Times, the U.S. Navy used Bluetooth advertising to encourage sailors to enlist in the reserves at the completion of their active-duty service. The ad campaign offered downloads of two-minute videos from pay phone kiosks at about a dozen naval bases.
Early this year, Pepsi offered music video downloads to
consumers in six cities to promote its short-lived WB series Pepsi Smash. The
campaign was billed as the largest ever Bluetooth marketing campaign in the
Author details:
Here the Author Kevin Cantera, a
free lance writer in

