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T-Mobile is giving its users a treat by including JuiceCaster, a mobile social networking service, to twelve of their handsets. JuiceCaster lets users share pictures and videos with their social network friends through the use of mobile phones.
To be offered as an unlimited add-on service which will costs $2.99 per month, JuiceCaster 6.0 will start appearing on T-Mobile handsets starting in early May. Once T-Mobile users subscribe to the service, they can start sharing pictures and videos, update their social networking profiles, friend lists, comments, ratings and personal statuses using their mobile phones. JuiceCaster currently works with top online social networking sites which include MySpace, Facebook and Twitter among others.
I would have to agree with Nick Desai, CEO of Juice Wireless, Inc. when he said that users are becoming more dependent on their mobile phones today not only for communication purposes but to network as well.
“By enabling users to easily capture and post desired content to their online profiles and update their status with real-time videos, we provide unprecedented capabilities in the social communications arena.”
Now, who says that the mobile web is dead? It’s just starting to live and grow.
T-Mobile is giving its users a treat by including JuiceCaster, a mobile social networking service, to twelve of their handsets. JuiceCaster lets users share pictures and videos with their social network friends through the use of mobile phones.
To be offered as an unlimited add-on service which will costs $2.99 per month, JuiceCaster 6.0 will start appearing on T-Mobile handsets starting in early May. Once T-Mobile users subscribe to the service, they can start sharing pictures and videos, update their social networking profiles, friend lists, comments, ratings and personal statuses using their mobile phones. JuiceCaster currently works with top online social networking sites which include MySpace, Facebook and Twitter among others.
I would have to agree with Nick Desai, CEO of Juice Wireless, Inc. when he said that users are becoming more dependent on their mobile phones today not only for communication purposes but to network as well.
Now, who says that the mobile web is dead? It’s just starting to live and grow.
Via [SlashPhone]
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