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graymanbriefing · 1 year
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Government Oversight Brief: BLUF: The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) purchased 55 million U.S. citizens' data from SafeGraph and Cuebiq which provided the CDC with tracking and monitoring information in an effort to review compliance with lockdowns. The intent for the obtained contracts was revealed in the CDC's justification statements which read "assess home-by-hour behaviors [curfew analysis] by exploring the percentage of mobile devices at home during specific period of time"... IOT collect "a comprehensive picture of movement/travel of persons during the COVID-19 pandemic to better understand mandatory stay-at-home orders, business closure, school re-openings, and other non-pharmaceutical interventions in states and cities." The CDC explained that they would use "the necessary data to continue critical emergency response functions related to evaluating the impact of visits to key points of interest, stay at home orders, closures, re-openings and other public heath communications related to mask mandate, and other merging research areas on community transmission of SARS-CoV-2." So...(CLASSIFIED, see full briefs in real-time by joining at www.graymanbriefing.com)
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techitoolz · 1 year
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Motorola to launch three new edge series smartphones. Check specifications, date - Economic Times
Motorola to launch three new edge series smartphones. Check specifications, date – Economic Times
Find yourself closer to the edge…September 8 👀#hellomoto #findyouredge pic.twitter.com/DR1eDFvbS8In several articles, The New York Times has used location data provided by a company called Cuebiq, which analyses data for advertisers and marketers. This data comes from smartphone users who have agreed to share their locations with certain apps, such as ones that provide weather alerts or…
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farooqshahzad · 2 years
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Simple Tips for Running a Gas Station and Convenience Store Business
Simple Tips for Running a Gas Station and Convenience Store Business There are a number of tips business owners should keep in mind when it comes to effectively operating and managing a gas station. Efficiency becomes all the more important when individuals must also oversee activities at an attached convenience store. When it comes to running a successful gas station, business owners should prioritize all factors related to fuel, from quality of fuel to the cost of the supply chain. Fuel, and all other aspects of a service station, must be kept up to local, state, and federal standards, while also adhering to standards set by organizations such as the United States Environmental Protection Agency and the Occupational Safety and Health Administration. Similarly, gas station owners must keep track of a station’s tank amounts. It is advisable to take inventory of tank amounts, along with counter-vendor sales, at the end of each shift. As owners secure their fuel situation, they must also focus on the operation of the business itself. When it comes to setting hours of operation, owners should consider the importance of early morning commuters. Opening later in the day not only results in missing out on these sales, but also impedes the development of a regular customer base. On a related note, owners should strive to hire punctual, responsible employees who treat customers with respect, further encouraging repeat business. Finally, owners should focus on the proper management of a gas station cash register. In addition to taking inventory and register reports at the end of each shift, employees should log all shift totals in a running ledger. The ledger can also serve as a source of information regarding tank amounts, sales inventory, and receipts from the register. Cash from the register should be deposited on a daily basis. Several tactics for running a successful gas station overlap with good convenience store practices, such as hiring reliable employees and carefully managing inventory and cash register deposits. That said, business owners must also be prepared to manage a number of unique convenience store responsibilities. For example, convenience store owners should maintain the cleanliness of their restrooms. Many customers associate the cleanliness and upkeep of restrooms with the quality of the store itself and are unlikely to return if they find a messy or inoperable toilet. Owners should keep employees equipped with cleaning supplies, schedule daily cleanings, and have a system in place for spot cleanings. Soda and food areas should also be cleaned as often as necessary. Business owners running convenience stores attached to gas stations should not overlook the importance of proper exterior lighting. A GasBuddy and Cuebiq study found that customers are 50 percent more likely to stop at a station with high-quality forecourt lighting. Customers typically associate well-lit parking lots and stores with safety and security, especially at night. Owners investing in new forecourt lighting should look into the cost-effective benefits of LED technology. Finally, convenience store managers should not be afraid to occasionally test new products. If a new drink or snack item is gaining attention in the market, business owners can acquire a set amount for a limited time. If a new product is popular, owners can continue to restock. via WordPress https://farooqshahzad.wordpress.com/2022/09/29/simple-tips-for-running-a-gas-station-and-convenience-store-business/
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digitrenndsamr · 2 years
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Research Report to Understand Demographical Landscape of Indoor Location Based Service Market
The global indoor location based service market is anticipated to reach a value of US$ 19.3 Bn by 2030. The indoor location based service market is projected to expand at a CAGR of ~10% from 2020 to 2030 in terms of revenue. The growth of the indoor location based service market is due to rising use of location-based services for promotional applications and increasing penetration of connected devices such as smartphones, tablets, and notepads, which, in turn, have triggered growth of the market globally. During the forecast period, North America is anticipated to emerge as a leading indoor location based service market, followed by Europe and Asia Pacific.
Get sample copy of at:   https://www.transparencymarketresearch.com/sample/sample.php?flag=S&rep_id=51645
Rising Emphasis on Consumer Preference and Consumer Behavior
Consumer preference is significant across the globe. The trend has shifted from a seller oriented to a customer oriented market, with enhanced focus on customization & personalization of products according to needs and wants of customers. According to a survey conducted by Oracle Corporation, nearly 85% of the people who were part of the survey (across the globe) think that indoor location based service is important for industries to sustain in this competitive era. Indoor location based service could help industries to increase revenue and optimize the operations by providing the right product to the right person at the right time.
The shift in trend to provide better products and enhance customer satisfaction is driving the indoor location based service market. The impact of this driver is expected to be high.
Indoor Location Based Service: Market Segmentation
The global indoor location based service market has been segmented in terms of component, application, technology, industry, and region. Based on component, the market has been classified into hardware, software, and services. Among applications, the tracking & geosocial networking segment dominated the global indoor location based service market in 2019. Based on technology, the market has been bifurcated into Wi-Fi/WLAN, Bluetooth, RFID, and Global Positioning System (GPS). In terms of industry, the retail segment dominated the global indoor location based service market in 2019.
Indoor Location Based Service Market: Regional Outlook
In terms of region, the global indoor location based service market has been segmented into North America, Europe, Asia Pacific, Middle East & Africa, and South America. North America is anticipated to dominate the indoor location based service market during the forecast period. The U.S. is estimated to hold a notable share of the indoor location based service market in North America and the market in the country is projected to expand at a CAGR of 11.7% during the forecast period, as the maximum number of retail as well as other business enterprises within North America are based in the U.S. Asia Pacific held a substantial share of the global indoor location based service market in 2019 with China, India, and Japan being the major markets in the region. The indoor location based service market in Europe, Middle East & Africa, and South America is also projected to expand moderately during the forecast period.
The report provides in-depth segment analysis of the global indoor location based service market, thereby providing valuable insights at macro as well as micro levels. Analysis of major countries which hold growth opportunities or account for significant share has also been included as part of geographic analysis of the indoor location based service market.
Indoor Location Based Service Market: Competition Dynamics
The research study includes profiles of leading companies operating in the global indoor location based service market. Key players profiled in the report include Apple Inc., Cisco System Inc., Cuebiq Inc., Environmental Systems Research Institute (ESRI) Inc., Google LLC, Gravy Analytics, HERE Technologies, Microsoft Corporation, PlaceIQ, QUALCOMM Inc., Ubimo Ltd., and Verve Wireless, Inc.
Global Indoor Location Based Service Market: Segmentation
Indoor Location Based Service Market, by Component
Hardware
Software/Solution
Services
Data Analytics & Consulting
System Integration & Maintenance
Indoor Location Based Service Market, by Application
Navigation & Travel
Tracking & Geosocial Networking
Foot Traffic Analytics
Mapping
Indoor Location Based Service Market, by Technology
Wi-Fi/ WLAN
Bluetooth
RFID
Global Positioning System (GPS)
Indoor Location Based Service Market, by Industry
Retail
BFSI
Hospitality
Transportation & Logistics
Healthcare
Others (Aerospace & Defense, and Government)
Indoor Location Based Service Market, by Region
North America
Europe
Asia Pacific
Middle East & Africa
South America
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geosophy · 4 years
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How @nytimes Have Changed!  @jamesglanz @jenvalentino @bencareynyt + @cuebiq crank out another sublimely incisive geospatial dive into #coronavirus using mobile device data... scarcely 100 days after their (also beautiful) teardown of these same data over privacy dread... And it. is. so. good.   4/2/20
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theliberaltony · 4 years
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via Politics – FiveThirtyEight
Graphics by Julia Wolfe
A favorite new debate taking place around the Twitter hearth is whether complying with social distancing guidelines is a partisan statement in and of itself. Blue states, such as Washington and New York, were initially hit hardest by the COVID-19 crisis, and stay-at-home orders went into effect as early as March 19 (California was first out of the gate). A number of red states have refrained from implementing such public-safety orders, and many Republican-leaning states, particularly in the South, didn’t issue orders for weeks afterward — as late as April 3 in Florida and Georgia. Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis waffled over closing the state but eventually did so under pressure from state lawmakers.
But, at least on the front end of this crisis, Americans weren’t deciding what to do based on politics. Americans living in red states appear to have taken the crisis plenty seriously; data shows that residents there were staying home well before their governors issued stay-at-home orders.
Cuebiq, a private data company, assessed the movement of people via GPS-enabled mobile devices across the U.S.1 If you look at movement data in a cross-section of states President Trump won in the southeast in 2016 — Tennessee, Georgia, Louisiana, North Carolina, South Carolina and Kentucky — 23 percent of people were staying home on average during the first week of March. That proportion jumped to 47 percent a month later across these six states.
If defying social distancing orders were really a political statement, you’d think that the southeast would be a hotbed for dissent. Yet people in the six states we examined changed their behavior around mid-March, before the states’ official stay-at-home orders. In fact, about 90 percent of the total change between early March and mid-April had occurred in the week before the stay-at-home orders were passed in each state.
That’s more or less in line with the country at large, as you can see in the chart below.
Almost uniformly across these states, people started staying home beginning on March 14. The percentage of people staying home rose rapidly over the following nine days and tended to plateau by March 23.
The Cuebiq data suggests that behavioral changes were largely driven by people making a voluntary choice to stay home rather than being forced to do so by a state-sanctioned stay-at-home order. One need only look at the behavior of residents in North Carolina and their neighbors in South Carolina: While North Carolina issued a stay-at-home order eight days before South Carolina, a stabilized number of people in both states started staying at home about a week before North Carolina’s order.
Why did people begin to stay at home so early? In mid-March, the seriousness of the virus had begun to permeate the national and international conversation. On March 9, the Dow dropped to its lowest point since the 2008 financial crisis. Earlier that same day, Italy announced a nationwide lockdown. On March 11, the NBA announced that it would suspend its season indefinitely, a sign to many Americans that the pandemic would indeed change all facets of life, and on March 12, the World Health Organization declared COVID-19 a pandemic. Some of the earliest official actions in the U.S. occurred around that time in the state of Washington, when Gov. Jay Inslee announced on March 11 a ban in three counties on gatherings of more than 250 people and public schools in Seattle also announced they would close. Many other U.S. cities closed schools, restaurants and bars in rapid succession around March 16.
This sort of mass behavioral change in such a short time is significant. It took over 50 years and hundreds of billions of dollars in prevention efforts to lower the percentage of people who smoke in the U.S. from 42 percent in 1965 to 13 percent in 2018. Americans reacted to the threat of COVID-19 in a relative blink of an eye.
The question that now looms, of course, is whether Americans’ individual behavioral changes will last as the pandemic wears on and the summer sun beckons. We’ll be watching movement data to get a sense of how quickly we will return to normal — or at least how quickly we establish a new normal.
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Where America Didn’t Stay Home As Covid-19 Spread
Graphics from the New York Times - April 2, 2020.  Compiled using Cuebiq analysis from cell phone data.
Note: Cuebiq calculated distance traveled by measuring a line between opposite corners of a box drawn around the locations observed for each person on each day. The travel for each county is the median of these per-person distances.
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karadin · 4 years
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RED STATES ‘LITERALLY’ PUTTING US IN DANGER during Coronavirus pandemic
Experts say the states that have complied with restrictions and reduced travel from about 5 miles a day to less than a mile a day may have helped to “sharply curb” the outbreak in those areas.
“That’s huge,” Aaron A. King, a University of Michigan professor who studies infectious disease, told the Times. “By any measure this is a massive change in behavior, and if we can make a similar reduction in the number of contacts we make, every indication is that we can defeat this epidemic.”
Now, even as the red areas on the map start to comply, the analysis shows that traveling distances in those states are still three times those in that imposed lockdown orders earlier.  
Cuebiq, the data intelligence firm that provided the data, said that, while travel doesn’t necessarily mean spread — driving to a grocery store that’s a couple miles away, for instance — loose restrictions clearly increase the risk of these states becoming the next coronavirus hot spots.
Dr. George Rutherford, professor of epidemiology at UCSF, pointed out the threat those areas pose to states like California, which was early to take on strict travel measures.
“Let’s assume that we flatten the curve, that we push transmission down in the Bay Area and we walk away with 1% immunity,” he told the Times. “Then, people visit from regions that have not sheltered in place, and we have another run of cases. This is going to happen.”
Meanwhile, the numbers keep growing. COVID-19 cases topped 216,000 on Thursday, up from 189,000 the day before, according to Johns Hopkins University. New York remains the epicenter of the American outbreak with more than 87,000 cases, up about 10,000 cases over the past day.
Deaths recently topped 1,300 in New York City and 5,000 in the U.S. Globally, more than 47,000 people have died from more than 941,000 confirmed cases.
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ritalee1993-blog · 4 years
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How the Use Location History Data can helps predict or track COVID-19?
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                Coronavirus pandemic redefines 2020. As we continue to see the spread of the epidemic, and governments and businesses respond to COVID-19, we have seen changes in all aspects of daily life. This COVID-19 pandemic is undoubtedly an important change to the search marketing. As the coronavirus pandemic dominates our concerns, news, politics, and economy, it’s dominating our Google searches. 
                 There are a lot of articles describing how the COVID-19 pandemic has changed people ’s search behavior and what changes companies have to make in the search marketing. However, one of the unique articles caught my eye. This article is “Google, Others Use Location History Data To Track Peoples' Movements During Pandemic” written by  Laurie Sullivan on Search Marketing Daily. This article make me understand that Search marketing and use location history data can also be used to help government public health departments predict and monitor the outbreak trend of major epidemics. 
               The article mainly describes that Google allows Alphabet to use its mobile location data in ad targeting to track people ’s activities during the COVID-19 pandemic. Google hopes to learn from the earlier version of the COVID-19 Community Mobility Report to gain insight into the changes in policies formulated for working from home, shelter in place, and other policies aimed at flattening the curve of this pandemic. The trends show aggregate anonymized data to chart movement trends by geography. Draw mobile trend graphs across different high-level locations (such as retail and leisure, grocery and pharmacies, parks, bus stations, workplaces and residences). These data can provide insight into how people listen to opinions and follow government instructions to provide asylum and work from home if possible. Google is not the only company that publishes tracking location data that can be used to target ads. Cuebiq’s data show that residents of Florida, Southeast and other regions are still traveling extensively. With the acceleration of the COVID-19 outbreak, more people may be exposed. Moreover, Many advertising companies (all use their location data to serve ads, but the company found that it can also accurately identify global movements.
https://www.mediapost.com/publications/article/349401/google-others-use-location-ad-data-to-track-mobil.htmlResource: 
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coronavirusitalia · 4 years
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The mitigation measures enacted as part of the response to the unfolding SARS-CoV-2 pandemic are unprecedented in their breadth and societal burden. A major challenge in this situation is to quantitatively assess the impact of non-pharmaceutical interventions like mobility restrictions and social distancing, to better understand the ensuing reduction of mobility flows, individual mobility changes, and impact on contact patterns. Here we report preliminary results on tackling the above challenges by using de-identified, large-scale data from a location intelligence company, Cuebiq, that has instrumented smartphone apps with high-accuracy location-data collection software. We focus this initial analysis on Italy, where the COVID-19 epidemic has already triggered an unprecedented and escalating series of restrictions on travel and individual mobility of citizens.
(via First Report)
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techitoolz · 1 year
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Motorola to launch three new edge series smartphones. Check specifications, date - Economic Times
Motorola to launch three new edge series smartphones. Check specifications, date – Economic Times
Find yourself closer to the edge…September 8 👀#hellomoto #findyouredge pic.twitter.com/DR1eDFvbS8In several articles, The New York Times has used location data provided by a company called Cuebiq, which analyses data for advertisers and marketers. This data comes from smartphone users who have agreed to share their locations with certain apps, such as ones that provide weather alerts or…
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deniscollins · 4 years
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How Your Phone Is Used to Track You, and What You Can Do About It
Smartphone collect location data through app call Cuebiq, which 15 million users users have agreed to share for weather locations and local gas stations, and analyzes data for advertises and marketers, as well as health centers and media. The info can also be misused by hackers or those you don’t want tracking you. As a manager, would you (1) continue to use these apps or (2) opt out of tracking by disabling Cuebiq with These instructions. Why? What are the ethics underlying your decision?
As researchers and journalists try to understand how the coronavirus pandemic is affecting people’s behavior, they have repeatedly relied on location information from smartphones. The data allows for an expansive look at the movements of millions of people, but it raises troublesome questions about privacy.
In several articles, The New York Times has used location data provided by a company called Cuebiq, which analyzes data for advertisers and marketers. This data comes from smartphone users who have agreed to share their locations with certain apps, such as ones that provide weather alerts or information on local gas stations. Cuebiq helps app makers use technology like GPS to determine the location of people’s phones, and in turn some of the app makers provide data to Cuebiq for it to analyze.
The data obtained by The Times is anonymized and aggregated, meaning that the journalists see broad statistics compiled by geographic area — such as the median distance moved per day by devices in a census tract. The Times did not receive information about individual phones and did not see the path any particular phone took.
About 15 million people in the United States use the relevant apps daily and allow them to track their location regularly. The aggregate data provides a representative sample of the population, according to academic papers that studied Cuebiq’s data in different metro areas.
What are the dangers of this data?
Although the data excludes names, phone numbers and other identifying information, even anonymous location information can be revealing. The Times has reported on the intrusiveness of such data, which can show intimate details like trips to doctor’s offices and outings with romantic partners.
The fact that companies are collecting, storing and selling location information about individuals at all presents risks. Hackers or people with access to raw location data could identify or follow a person without consent, by pinpointing, for example, which phone regularly spent time at that person’s home address.
Different companies have widely varying approaches to handling the information, including deleting large portions of it for privacy reasons or selling the raw data with no protections. Location data on individuals is used for purposes like marketing and analysis for hedge funds and law enforcement. There is no federal law in the United States that limits the use of location information in this way, although some have been proposed. Cuebiq said it collects and stores raw location data but does not sell it.
What are the benefits of this data?
Location data from smartphones is used for several purposes, most frequently for targeted advertising. For example, companies may show ads for sneakers to people who often go to a gym. Companies such as Apple and Google use similar information for mapping and traffic monitoring, or to tell people when stores are likely to be busy.
Makers of apps that sell the data say it allows them to give users their services without charging them money.
During the coronavirus pandemic, location information has shown where people are following social distancing rules, and where they have traveled — enabling analysis of potential hot spots. The Times has used this data to show that people from low-income areas were less likely to be able to shelter at home than people from high-income locations and to demonstrate how the virus may have spiraled out of control in the United States.
How would I know if my data is collected?
It can be difficult for people to keep track of whether and how their data is being gathered. Android-based devices and iPhones both require apps to ask users to enable location services before collecting the information, but the explanations people see when prompted to give permission are often incomplete or misleading. An app may tell users that granting access to their location will help them get weather alerts, but not mention that the data will be sold. That disclosure is often buried in a densely worded privacy policy.
In a recent test of five apps that provide information for Cuebiq’s data set, the disclosures indicated that the data would be shared for advertising and analysis, and users were directed to information on limiting that sharing. But some apps made it easier than others to stop the data collection. And in a test last year by New York Times opinion journalists of an app that sent data to Cuebiq, the initial prompt for the user to allow access to location information did not mention all the ways it would be used. That app later changed its messaging.
Even with such disclosures, it may not be clear to users how frequently someone’s information is collected and what it can show. In Europe and California, users can request their data. Elsewhere, policies vary by company.
You can request your data from Cuebiq or ask the company to delete your data regardless of where you live. Cuebiq ties your data to your phone’s so-called advertising ID, which is used by marketers and others to differentiate phones from each other, and will send you the information associated with that ID. To prevent people from getting data on others’ IDs, the company requires you to download an app that verifies the number and then makes the request. You can then delete the app without affecting your request. The app is available for both Android and iOS.
How can I opt out?
If you want to prevent Cuebiq from collecting your data, the easiest way is to disable the advertising ID on your phone. If you disable it, Cuebiq will no longer keep track of your device.
These instructions provide a good overview for disabling the ID on different Android phones. Apple provides a guide for iPhones here.
Cuebiq also provides several other ways to opt out of location tracking, outlined if you click “Control” on the company’s privacy page.
However, opting out of Cuebiq’s database will not prevent your information from being collected by a variety of other companies that gather and store precise location information. Some provide similar options, but not all do, and it is difficult to keep track of the myriad firms in the location-tracking industry.
If you want to avoid collection of your location data altogether, your best bet is to evaluate the individual apps on your phone to see whether they are collecting more about you than you would like. Prevent all but your most important apps from gaining access to the data, and allow them to get it only when you are using the app.
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dreimalfuermich · 6 years
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So, 16.09.2018
WIE R.W.F. ZUR BLUTWÄSCHE NACH TANGER
10:14h. Ein Gefühl von Strafversetzung, wenn die Nachbarn Sonntagmorgen um 10 Wäsche waschen und im Dojo die Kampfsport-Schreie losgehen, Männer in den Wehen, aber im Knast ist’s schön heute, ganz hellblau. 
Die Schönheit der Das besondere Restaurant Reihe, sind vielleicht die am schönsten gestalteten Seiten im FAZ.net
Das superstrenge, kantige Gesicht des koreanischen Mannes im Asia Market um die Ecke, und dann, wenn man ihn anspricht, wird er ganz sanft und freundlich und lächelt und ist der süßeste Mann der Welt. Er trägt immer ein weißes Hemd und eine schwarze Buntfaltenhose. Wie machen die das da, können die davon wirklich leben, das frage ich mich immer, wenn ich dran vorbeigehe. Gestern starrte ich auf eine Packung mit den gesüßten roten Bohnen, die die Japaner in Ohagi machen. Shigeru hatte früher manchmal Ohagi selbstgemacht. Danach fragte ich ihn ständig, wann er wieder welche machte, ich glaube, ich war fast schon aggressiv dabei.
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PowerLinks Media Limited
Gamned
Sojern, Inc.
ad6media
Digilant Spain, SLU
MGID Inc.
mediarithmics SAS
Getintent USA, inc.
Pixalate, Inc.
The Reach Group GmbH
1000mercis
Effiliation
Nativo, Inc.
TradeTracker
Cloud Technologies S.A.
Ziff Davis LLC
MiQ
TimeOne
travel audience GmbH
Demandbase, Inc.
mbr targeting GmbH
Internet BillBoard a.s.
AudienceProject Aps
Golden Bees
NEURAL.ONE
FM Labs LLC
Sub2 Technologies Ltd
ChannelSight
Oath (EMEA) Limited
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larebomrglobal · 3 years
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Indoor Location-Based Service Market - Global Industry Analysis, Size, Share, Growth, Trends and Forecast 2021-2027
In 2018, the global indoor LBS market size was valued at $1.83 billion. It is expected to register a CAGR of 43% over the forecast period. Growing penetration of connected devices such as mobile phones and tablets worldwide is expected to drive the market during the forecast period. Additionally, the growing use of location-based services for promotional applications is expected to propel the growth of the market over the next few years.
To Request a Sample of our Report on Indoor Location-Based Service Market https://www.orionmarketreports.com/request-sample/?id=23905
Key Players
Apple Inc.
Cuebiq Inc.
Google LLC
Gravy Analytics
HERE Technologies
PlaceIQ
QUALCOMM Inc.
Ubimo Ltd.
Verve Wireless, Inc.
A full report of Indoor Location-Based Service Market available at: https://www.orionmarketreports.com/indoor-location-based-services-lbs-market/23905/
Indoor Location-Based Service Market - Segmentation
By Type
Hardware
Software
Services
By Application
Location-based Advertising
Business Intelligence & Analytics
Fleet Management
Mapping & Navigation
Local Search & Information
Social Networking & Entertainment
Proximity Marketing
Asset Tracking
Others
The report covers the following objectives:
Proliferation and maturation of trade in the Indoor Location-Based Service Market
The market share of the Indoor Location-Based Service Market, supply and demand ratio, growth revenue, supply chain analysis, and business overview.
Current and future market trends that are influencing the growth opportunities and growth rate of the Indoor Location-Based Service Market.
Feasibility study, new market insights, company profiles, investment return, revenue (value), and consumption (volume) of the Indoor Location-Based Service Market.
Recent Developments
Market Overview and growth analysis
Import and Export Overview
Volume Analysis
Current Market Trends and Future Outlook
Market Opportunistic and Attractive Investment Segment
Geographic Coverage
North America Market Size and/or Volume
Latin America Market Size and/or Volume
Europe Market Size and/or Volume
Asia-Pacific Market Size and/or Volume
Rest of the world Market Size and/or Volume
Key Questions Answered by Indoor Location-Based Service Market Report
What was the Indoor Location-Based Service Market in 2020 and 2021; what are the estimated growth trends and market forecast (2021-2027).
What will be the CAGR of Aircraft Heat Exchanger Market during the forecast period (2021-2027)?
Which segments (product type/applications/end-user) were most attractive for investments in 2018? How are these segments are expected to grow during the forecast period (2021-2027)?
Which manufacturer/vendor/players in the Indoor Location-Based Service Market was the market leader in 2018?
Overview on the existing product portfolio, products in the pipeline, and strategic initiatives taken by key vendors in the market.
About Us:
Orion Market Reports (OMR) endeavors to provide exclusive blend of qualitative and quantitative market research reports to clients across the globe. Our organization helps both multinational and domestic enterprises to bolster their business by providing in-depth market insights and most reliable future market trends. Our reports address all the major aspects of the markets providing insights and market outlook to global clients.
Media Contact: Company Name: Orion Market Reports Contact Person: Mr. Anurag Tiwari Email: [email protected] Contact no: +91 780-304-0404
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dfwnews · 3 years
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Astraea Announces Partnership With Cuebiq
Astraea Announces Partnership With Cuebiq
Fusing geospatial and location data intelligence. Astraea, developer of the EarthAI geospatial analytics platform, today announced a partnership with Cuebiq, a leader in mobility intelligence and offline consumer insights. Fusing geospatial and mobility datasets give organizations a comprehensive understanding of the Earth’s surface and those who live on it. By combining Cuebiq’s innovative,…
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