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Our Favorite Mobile Predictions For 2013

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We've skimmed through many of the "Mobile In 2013" lists to create our own top 10. 

These are the predictions that either came up again and again, or that echoed our own analysis and data. 

We've tried to include predictions from across the mobile ecosystem. But many of the important trends— such as the slow-but-steady gains of HTML5, and mobile advertising's consolidation— will have impacts that cut across the industry. We've linked the sources so that you can view the original predictions. Here they are: 

1. *Mobile payments gain wider acceptance*. In Chetan Sharma's mobile predictions survey, 35 percent of respondents saidext mobile payments will be the big breakthrough in 2013, more than any other category. We've learned how to consume media on our phones, shop on our phones (via eBayext, Gilt, etc.), and of course, communicate and take photos. Now, payments and the wallet itselfext will go mobile. And it will likely be via credit card readers and payment apps like PayPal Hereext and breakaway success Square, and not via phone waving or tapping (also known as near-field communications, or NFCext). David Marcusext, PayPal's president, may be biased, but he's right when he says NFCextwill sputter in 2013ext. (See chart, above.)
2. *HTML5 will gain traction*. Parmy Olson at Forbesextput this at number one on her listext. We believe HTML5 will be helped along by two factors. Firstly, it's now more fully baked. The W3C announcedext in December that HTML5 is "feature complete," meaning it's a stable standard that businesses and developers can plan around. It will be official by 2014. And mobile players in emerging markets are betting that HTML5ext can anchor a low-cost smartphone economy. 
3. *Mobile advertising will consolidate and simplify*. We plumbed the complexities of mobile advertising in one of last year's most popular reportsext. In 2013, more market-leading mobile ad platforms and technologies will emerge. Mergers and acquisitions will remove some clutterext. Ad exchanges, networks, and data management products will streamline. Programmatic buyingext will add efficiency and transparency. Advertisers and consumers will win. 
4. *Mini-tablets and phablets **will **successfully blur the lines between device types*. Reutersextwritesext that phablets (phones that are also tablets) are the gadget of 2013. Tablets will become more portable (and cheaperext) thanks to 7-inch screen sizes. Phones will become better viewers as they cross the 5-inch threshold. The proliferation of large-screen mobile devices will boost the uptake of mobile video, rich media ads, and mobile games. 
5. *Feature phones will become obsolete **in many developed markets*. However, as analyst Horace Dediu saysext in a podcast discussion of a post titled "The Last Feature Phoneext," it doesn't mean all smartphones will be the fully-featured kind many of us are familiar with. On a visit to Wal-Martext, Dediu noticed many Androidext phones on sale run outdated versions of the platform that won't allow users to fully participate in the modern smartphone ecosystem. 
6. *Android **will make progress on its monetization problem*. The app economy already has 1.2 billion consumers worldwideext. But Apple makes a lot more money in it than Androidext, despite the fact that Android has a larger market share. Android is working with carriers globally to enable carrier billing so that apps can monetize without credit cards. It's also making sure that the Googleext Play app store is omnipresent across Google's platforms. 
7. *The app discovery problem gets some serious attention*. As we reportedext, Apple's App Store now has 775,000 apps. Google Play is not too far behind. The growth in apps has outpaced the development of solutionsext that help consumers find and download useful apps. Look for technologies and services to emerge that cut through the mess and help consumers find what they need. Advertising may find a foothold in these search engines. 
8. *LTE speeds will become accessible to a critical mass of consumers in the U.S. and elsewhere*. Certain data-heavy applications, like mobile video and graphically intense games, aren't feasible outside of Wi-Fi range without 4Gext LTE, which offers connection speeds as fast or faster than home broadband. LTE alreadyext is already driving data usage for carriers in the U.S., Japan, and South Koreaext. LTE means a video-cenrtric mobile world is around the corner. 
9. *The third platform will in reality turn out to be a handful of niche players*. As Roger Chen writesext on CNEText, there will be the HTML5 mobile Web powering low-end phones, Windowsext Phone for Microsoftext Office and Windows aficionados (it will likely have the most success among the contenders for the third platform titleext). Amazon will perhaps roll out a smartphone to drive sales of digital media. BlackBerryext will hobble on independently for at least a short time as an alternative for those that like a physical keyboard. 
10. *Multiscreen supplants mobile-first as the buzzed-about paradigm*. Michael Cassidy, CEO of Undertone, which works on digital campaigns for brands, told Bloomberg TVext that in 2013 marketers will "go beyond individual devices and platforms" and look for multiscreen solutions that cut across the complexity of digital. We've discussedext the limitations of a mobile-first paradigm, and it seems as if the momentum is shifting towards multiscreen. 

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