What's new

The Internet Is Filling Up Because Indians Are Sending Millions of ‘Good Morning!’ Texts

Status
Not open for further replies.

ashok321

ELITE MEMBER
Joined
Nov 1, 2010
Messages
17,942
Reaction score
4
Country
Canada
Location
Malaysia
https://www.wsj.com/articles/the-in...ing-millions-of-good-morning-texts-1516640068

BN-XC372_0122GO_360RV_20180121235602.jpg



Google researchers in Silicon Valley were trying to figure out why so many smartphones were freezing up half a world away. One in three smartphone users in India run out of space on their phones daily.

The answer? Two words. “Good Morning!”

The glitch, Google discovered, was an overabundance of sun-dappled flowers, adorable toddlers, birds and sunsets sent along with a cheery message.

HC-GV861_Messag_G_20180122115026.jpg


Millions of Indians are getting online for the first time—and they are filling up the internet. Many like nothing better than to begin the day by sending greetings from their phones. Starting before sunrise and reaching a crescendo before 8 a.m., internet newbies post millions of good-morning images to friends, family and strangers.

All that good cheer is driving a 10-fold increase in the number of Google searches for “Good Morning images” over the past five years. Pinterest, the San Francisco visual-search platform, added a new section to display images with quotes. It saw a ninefold increase over the past year in the number of people in India downloading such pictures.

Facebook Inc.’s WhatsApp messaging service—which has 200 million monthly active users in India, making the country its biggest market—added a status message last year so users could say good morning to all of their contacts at once.

Desh Raj Sharma, 71 years old, recently started using a smartphone. At around 6 a.m. every day he searches for and sends good-morning images to more than 50 friends and family using WhatsApp.

BN-XC373_0122GO_M_20180121235640.jpg

Desh Raj Sharma, 71 years old, likes to send good-morning messages on his smartphone. PHOTO:RAJ KAMAL SHARMA

In one recent dispatch, a toddler sporting a fedora and holding his hand over his chest says, “Our heart is the only thing in the world that works without any rest. So keep it happy, whether it is yours or your dear one’s. Good Morning.”

In another, an image of Krishna, the Hindu god of love, is paired with the words “Good Morning. Silent prayers often reach God faster, because they are not bound by the weight of words."

“These WhatsApp messages are really my thoughts put into words," said Mr. Sharma.

Perhaps India’s most famous morning-message enthusiast is Prime Minister Narendra Modi. He gets up at 5 a.m. to practice yoga and is known to fire off good-morning messages as the sun is rising. Last year, he admonished a group of lawmakers for not responding to his greetings.

Related Video


The Internet's Next Big User Group

In India, inexpensive smartphones and data plans have brought an unlikely group of users online: the uneducated and illiterate, who are adapting apps to fit their own needs and skills. Photo/Video: Karan Deep Singh/The Wall Street Journal
Bonding with large groups through work, school, family and friend circles is important for Indians. This is one reason wedding celebrations often involve hundreds if not thousands of guests. That tendency has been given new fuel in the form of affordable smartphones and wireless broadband.

Some complain all these greetings come too early, are too cheery and too likely to freeze their low-cost, low-memory phones. To deal with the annoying morning cheer, some leave message groups or refuse to download the images.

Mr. Sharma’s niece, 24-year-old Prerna Sharma, says she respects her uncle and is glad he is excited about technology—but she has had enough from him and her other relatives who send morning messages every day.

“They’ll call you and say, ‘did you see that good morning?’ ” she said, and she doesn’t know what to say because she rarely reads them. “Most of the time my notifications are on mute.”

Popular Indian comedy group “All India Bakchod” addressed the issue in an October skit. A bedraggled man plays the role of WhatsApp, driven to exhaustion by a demanding mother who orders him to deliver morning messages to friends and family who ignore the messenger.

BN-XC370_0121GO_P_20180121234649.jpg

A good-morning message sent by Desh Raj Sharma on Jan. 20, 2018 on the phone of his niece, Prerna Sharma.PHOTO: PRERNA SHARMA

When Google researchers peeked into Indian consumers’ phones, they found thousands of “good morning” images gumming up their storage. One in three smartphone users in India run out of space daily, according to a survey by data-storage firm Western Digital Corp. , compared with one in 10 in the U.S.

Google’s solution: a new app called Files Go that highlights files for possible deletion—with a special feature to search out and delete all good-morning messages at once.

The company used its giant image database and artificial-intelligence tools to train the app to weed out good-morning messages. The key to spotting them was looking for a certain size and type of image file, said Josh Woodward, the Google product manager in Mountain View, Calif., who led the effort.

TAKE A LOOK AT OTHER RECENT A-HEDS

“We were trying to deconstruct what is the DNA of a good morning message for months,” he said. “It’s been a lot of hard work to get it right." Early versions were picking out photos of children wearing T-shirts with words on them.

Google unveiled the app in December in New Delhi. The morning-message deleting function prompted the crowd of media and government officials to break out in applause.

The app has more than 10 million downloads so far, with more users in India than any other country. It has cleared up on average more than 1 gigabyte of data per user, Google said.

Kanwarjot Singh, 31, tapped into the good-morning craze with his website, WishGoodMorning.com, which he launched in 2015. Hundreds of thousands of people download his images. Categories include special messages for siblings, boyfriends and girlfriends and bosses.

One recent message shows a golden sunset and the phrase, “We permit limitations to limit us, instead of limiting our limitations.” Another, showing a single red rose, says, “Good morning to my life’s rose. Your fragrance makes all of life’s thorns worth tolerating.”

BN-XC371_0122GO_574V_20180121235557.jpg

A message from the wishgoodmorning.com website PHOTO: KANWARJOT SINGH

Mr. Singh is a morning-message maniac himself. Before getting out of bed, he spends as long as 45 minutes on his smartphone responding to the many messages he has already received. Then he dispatches his own cheery notes to friends and relatives. “I feel happy people are remembering me," he said.

On the first morning of the new year, he found the perfect image. It showed mountain peaks and a rising sun, signaling the dawn of 2018.

WhatsApp says more than 20 billion New Year’s messages were sent in India, a record, and more than any other country.
 
.
Okay, before a lot of Internet warriors come out in droves to attack Modi for this, the reason he does it is because he wants all his minions to wake up early in the morning.

But, yeah, it's frigging annoying.
 
. .
So internet gets clogged because Indians are sending text messages?
New users are sending message to their loved ones (mostly) and that's a problem for somebody?
Who TF writes such stupid article?
 
.
So internet gets clogged because Indians are sending text messages?
New users are sending message to their loved ones (mostly) and that's a problem for somebody?
Who TF writes such stupid article?

Indians are not filling up the internet. It’s stinking up the internet.
 
. . . .
Well if that's the case then good morning to all. Let's destroy the internet even more.

By the off the topic, as a former CCNA and CCNP training holder. I call the above article as bullshit.
 
.
Well if that's the case then good morning to all. Let's destroy the internet even more.

By the off the topic, as a former CCNA and CCNP training holder. I call the above article as bullshit.

Its not a networking issue but a storage one.
 
. .
Its not a networking issue but a storage one.
Still this is bullshit . Because my final year project in telecommunications engineering was "Dynamic spectrum sharing" . And I know how much messed up above article is.

@ashok321 @randomradio @Nilgiri
Bobs and vegenes??? I sex u baby, u sex me. Show ur big milk tanks. I LIKES milk tanks very much. Bitch Lasagna. LMFAO:omghaha::omghaha::omghaha::omghaha::omghaha:

View attachment 449840 View attachment 449841 View attachment 449842 View attachment 449843
Lol Dr Joseph Goebbels one was epic. Who the hell wants to make that idiots his ideal personality ?
 
.
Still this is bullshit . Because my final year project in telecommunications engineering was "Dynamic spectrum sharing" . And I know how much messed up above article is.

Title of the article is not related to its body. Read again.
 
.
His fellow Hindutva fascist nazis LMFAO
Still this is bullshit . Because my final year project in telecommunications engineering was "Dynamic spectrum sharing" . And I know how much messed up above article is.


Lol Dr Joseph Goebbels one was epic. Who the hell wants to make that idiots his ideal personality ?
 
.
Cloud storage is filling up fast. To maint cloud services is the biggest worry
 
.
Status
Not open for further replies.

Pakistan Defence Latest Posts

Pakistan Affairs Latest Posts

Back
Top Bottom