Tracking Stuff in Mobile

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Archive for May 2007

AT&T get busy rebranding for iPhone launch

Link: AT&T steps up Cingular rebranding ahead of iPhone | Technology, Media & Telecommunications | Reuters.co.uk

Following on from last week’s FCC approval of the long-awaited iPhone, US carrier partner AT&T has been busy over the weekend rebranding their last remaining Cingular stores to the AT&T brand.

The iPhone is due to launch in the US in late June, with Europe and the rest of the world following later in the year.

If you’re confused about the whole Cingular/AT&T rebranding thing, Stephen Colbert of Comedy Central did a rather amusing feature about it a while back. Click here to view the video.

Text for trash in India

Link: NDTV.com: SMS for garbage free neighbourhood

Hot on the heels of the post about Channel 4’s Binwatch moblog comes this story from India.

There are 2500 dumps in Delhi, which are meant to be cleared everyday by either the MCD or private contractors hired by the MCD. But usually the men in charge like to wait till there is enough garbage to fill two trucks.

The Delhi government finally has a solution to the problem. One can now check the number listed on the garbage dump and SMS it to the concerned authorities. Help has been promised within 2 hours or atleast that is the idea.

Text and drugs: just say no…

Link: CEN News : City Edition : Texts sealed fate of dealer

 TEXTING his mates about drug deals landed a teenager with a nine-month sentence in a young offenders’ institution for cannabis dealing.Two phones, along with three bags of herbal cannabis worth almost £130 and £1,740 in cash were found when police carried out a drugs raid at 19-year-old Louis Tucker’s former home at Jasmine Court, Cambridge.Analysis of the phones revealed text messages relating to drug-dealing, the city’s crown court was told yesterday (Thursday, 17 May).

The fact that police caught him red-handed at his house rolling a joint possibly didn’t help either!

American teens clock up huge text bills

Link: For Texting Teens, an OMG Moment When the Phone Bill Arrives - washingtonpost.com

Sofia Rubenstein, 17, got in trouble the way a lot of teens do these days.

Last month the Washington high school junior used 6,807 text messages, which, at a rate of 15 cents apiece for most of them, pushed the family’s Verizon Wireless bill to more than $1,100 for the month. Sofia knew she’d been texting a lot but couldn’t believe the “incredible” number she hit. “I just thought, oh my God, my life is over,” she said.

That’s a lot of text.. and a lot of $$ for a kid to rack up just on texts alone. How did she manage it? Apparently her plan only gave her 100 inclusive texts each month. Hmm, time to change the plan? Or perhaps her parents should just stop paying her phone bills :)

Iranian MP says MMS snooping is illegal

Link: TaliyaNews :. MMS controlling equals eavesdropping – MP

This relates to a story from a few weeks ago about Iran’s plans to censor MMS traffic.

Ramezan-Ali Sadeqzadeh arguing that MMS and SMS messages are private interactions between two parties, added in an interview with IRNA, “There is no legal justification for such practices.”

The first deputy of Parliament’s Mines & Industries Commission added, “Just as it is illegal to eavesdrop the conversation of two people in accordance with the IRI Constitution in any way, save for doing so based on the verdict of a court of justice in order to prove a crime, or to prevent a threat against national security, and similar cases, controlling the MMS and SMS contents, too, need to be based on such a verdict, or after the filing of a complaint by the receiver of the unwanted texts, or pictures, or films.”

An American view on the N95

Had an email in from Giff at i2SMS in Atlanta, ranting about the Nokia N95. Here’s what he had to say..

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I was at a tech event last evening and a chap from Finland was there showing off his N95.  Wicked is the one word that came to my mind. It isn’t available as of yet in the States, but they are bringing it over by demand and plan on selling it outside of the carriers.  They hear the price is $749.00.

 They had downloaded a widget that had a fantastic UI for RSS feeds, it worked purdy darn good just off of the Edge network, and had multiple cool features, all easy to navigate and understand.  I would wonder, given the choice between the N95 and the iPhone, just how many, who compare the two side by side, would actually pick the iPhone?

This phone was slick!
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Thanks Giff!

Rumour: Google’s UK MVNO to launch soon

Link: Google May Launch Mobile Service In UK

We’ve heard from a good source in the mobile industry that Google may be preparing to launch its own branded mobile network in the UK in the next few weeks. If our source is accurate, Google will become a Mobile Virtual Network Operator (MVNO) via a deal with UK mobile phone company O2.

Cat, pigeons.

Bull, china shop.

Could be total rubbish. Could be highly accurate. However, you have to ask what a service provider like o2 would be doing supplying Google. o2 can’t even get an unlimited data plan out the door. But, you know, we’ve discussed that here in the past.

So, interesting. A Google MVNO? One would imagine it would be an ultra simple proposition — a no bullshit offering that works and at very low direct cost.

I tell you what though, what would happen if the MVNO was free? Free to use? Shit. That, I would like to see.

Or if it was a tenner-for-everything per month? Hmm. I wonder.

Bring it on, more, more more.

I’d use it…

guideCast launch mobile site link exchange service

guideCast, an innovative provider of mobile services and advertising campaigns, today announced the launch of its mobile link network, a powerful programs for boosting the awareness and distribution of mobile sites.  Geared towards “off-deck” mobile sites, the network is free of charge and once members register, they simply copy a single line of code on their mobile sites.

Interesting. Here’s how it works:

By joining the network, site owners can dramatically increase the number of people viewing their content and dramatically increase their page views and visits to their mobile sites. guideCast’s Managing Director, Jeff Brookes says, “the concept is similar to that of a banner exchanges on the web side - where one member displays a mobile banner for another member’s mobile site and vise versa.

Sounds like a traditional website banner exchange service. I would assume they sell on a percentage of available link inventory to gain income? You can find out more info here.

Australian ad info is just a xip away..

Link: iTWire - Ads to your mobile? just SMS a ‘xip’ code

Another startup has entered the rapidly growing field of companies seeking to exploit the nascent market for advertising to mobile phones: Xip will deliver information in response to an SMS containing the advertiser’s code sent to Xip’s phone number.

Last month UK company, Txt4 entered the local market  trialling a system that enables consumers to send an SMS to the same 13 xxx xxx number that advertisers routinely use to receive customer enquiries..

Good to see the market picking up down under for this sort of thing - wonder how Txt4 are getting on with their trial?

Clear Channel to launch free radio text services

Link: Clear Channel to launch mobile texting program | CNET News.com

Clear Channel Communications on Monday is expected to launch a free mobile program that enables listeners to text-message radio stations from their cell phones to make song requests, get real-time traffic reports and access other information.

Users can send text messages to studios, take part in contests, make requests and dedications, and view the last 10 songs played. They can also check current traffic conditions, test their knowledge with station specific trivia, and participate in opinion polls.

South Africa mobile content woes

Link: Mercury: Downloading debt

‘Get all the ring tones you want. Come and play. Join the club. Win R15 000 cash.”

These are just some of the catchy jingles rattled off in fast-paced television adverts that woo unwitting consumers into sending off text messages to buy trendy ringtones, songs, games and wallpapers - debatably superfluous sales known as “data content”.

The only problem with some of these adverts is that unless you watch very closely and are looking for the catch - the small print - there’s a fair chance you’ll text the short number without realising you’re taking the first step towards subscribing to a weekly “service”.

Wi-fi signals big change for mobiles

Link: BBC NEWS | Technology | Wi-fi signals big change for mobiles

As the numbers turning to 3G are climbing, those mobile networks could be forgiven for thinking that it was only a matter of time before they started recouping the considerable capital cost of buying and building that network.

Unfortunately the relentless pace of innovation may be about to dent the dreams of recovering those costs.

Includes wise words from the founders of Truphone and Jajah. Definitely worth a read!

Acme Systems launches a linux powered SMS gateway

Link: Linux powers SMS appliance

Acme Systems has introduced a tiny Linux-based gateway that connects cellular SMS (simple message service) and TCP/IP networks.

The SMS FoxBox integrates a quad-band GSM modem, offers web, email (smtp/pop3), and mysql interfaces, and supports local message storage through removable flash storage.(Click for larger view of the FoxBox)FoxBox ports(Click to enlarge)According to Acme, applications for the FoxBox include:

Radio or TV shows with live interaction with the public, such as real-time SMS polls
Data processing for alarms and measure/control units
Sending and receiving SMS from a web site
Mass SMS message distributionServer control via SMS
SMS-based order processing systems.

This might be useful for anyone wanting to connect systems or subsystems to the mobile network. Very cool.

Australians learn to deal with mobile addicition

Link: Handling mobile addiction | The Courier-Mail

Mix one part “Why doesn’t he love me?” with a fully charged battery and you have a recipe for disaster. According to recent figures from the Telecommunications Industry Ombudsman, we’re starting to get a little phone rage.

Mobile phone service complaints leapt by almost a third in the past year, mainly driven by hassles over contracts, which increased by 37 per cent. Fifty per cent more people experienced financial difficulty.

C&W to launch new workplace GSM service

Link: C&W to take on mobile giants with new workplace service - Independent Online Edition > Business News

Back in May last year, the UK telecoms regulator Ofcom announced the outcome of a spectrum auction, to ’sell off’ the surplus GSM frequencies between allocated ranges for low power GSM network usage. 14 companies bid amounts between £50k and £1m for one of 12 licenses up for grabs. Cable & Wireless bagged one for the bargain price of £51,002, and have news has now leaked out about what they plan to do with it.

The company is to launch a service that will enable its business customers to make calls over a small mobile network within offices. Calls will then be routed over a normal fixed-line broadband internet network.

A spokeswoman for C&W confirmed that the company was “planning an FMC service” but declined to give a timetable for its launch. However, industry executives said that the service could be up and running within a few weeks, once the company finalises a roaming agreement with an unnamed national mobile operator, which would carry calls when the user is outside a corporate site.

One of the other 12 successful bidders is Mapesbury Communications, and we’ll be having a chat with their Managing Director Magnus Kelly later on in the week. Watch this space for the full interview!

When is a phone not a phone?

Cast your mind back a week or so, to the story we posted about the ’sensual’ concept phones put together by students at the University of Dundee. There was one made into a pendant, called the ‘Aware’ which sent a tingle down your back when one of your friends was nearby. Well, it got me curious - so I visited their website. There’s loads of cool designs on there, but could I buy one? Did they exist? A few emails back and forth later, and Ian Shiels, a 2nd year Interactive Media Designer from the project, has very kindly sent over some more information.Take it away Ian..

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These are prototypes of a new generation of mobile phones that have the potential to shatter the conventions of popular mobile telecommunications. They turn their back on the current trend of cramming more and more technical features into an increasingly smaller package. Electronics can only go so small, and once they reach their limit, what will be the future of the huge mobile phone sector? Our prototypes engage users in an altogether un-explored direction; they engage their senses and emotions. We have turned our backs on the saturated world of rich media, and have instead aimed to produce subtler, simple interactions. The potential for this convention-shattering change in telecommunications is huge.

The surprisingly large amount of interest we have received in the week following the websites launch is testament to people’s willingness to look at a fresh idea for the future of mobile telecommunication. Popular searches in Google for us are ’sensual phones’, ‘m:ssage’ and ‘phone not phone Dundee’.

You can’t buy them, they’re just some lovely prototypes. As far as functionality, they don’t fully work, because as prototypes, their most important job is to convey the idea and the primary interaction (sound, light, movement) and they do that wonderfully! The m:ssage prototype is a little different, we embedded the circuitry from an old mobile phone inside it, and so you CAN actually text it to get a massage. The website looks like you can buy them, and the ruse has been a huge success in aiding visitors to the site to imagine these phones as real products, people seem to just love them! We won’t be sending the prototypes out for reviews in case we lose them, but anyone interested is welcome to visit them where they live, in the Interactive Media Design department of the University of Dundee.

- - - - - -

Thanks for that Ian. Not quite ready to buy yet, but never say never.. You can visit the Phone Not Phone site here, and check out some of their other quite cool designs.

Mobile industry forum proposes TV prem guidelines

Technology news - Tech.co.uk | Mobile industry fights TV-text rip-offs

Protecting consumers from rip-offs by TV quiz competitions and text votes is the impetus behind a new initiative from the mobile industry.

Aimed at beefing up customer protection from scams and shady practices recently uncovered in the UK, the Mobile Entertainment Forum (MEF) will shortly publish a framework setting out how “participation-TV” should operate. It is designed to give consumers complete confidence that they won’t get ripped off when using their mobile to vote by text. The MEF guidelines will complement the existing Code of Practice from ICSTIS , the UK’s premium rate services regulator .

The full MEF press release is here. Whether it’s too little too late remains to be seen - with reports yesterday that ITV’s premium revenue has dropped 20% in the past couple of months and ICSTIS currently consulting on plans to ‘license’ premium SMS for radio and TV, the industry is already in overdrive in an attempt to restore consumer confidence and bring about a change in attitude amongst broadcasters on what can - and can’t - be done.

Truphone va internazionale

Link: Truphone

Just had an email from mobile VOIP provider Truphone, to let me know they’ve just launched their brand new international pages. So, if you’ve got friends who are interested in getting the service but aren’t in the UK or US (and don’t speak English), you can now point them to instructions and information in their local language. Plus there’s multi-lingual discussion forums to participate in, and a shop where you can buy Truphone-compatible handsets.

Mobile masts make it dangerous to play outside

Link: Protesters Fight Eyesore Mobile Mast (from The Argus)

I know we don’t normally cover this sort of thing, but I couldn’t resist posting a link to this story.

On one side, mobile giant T-Mobile. On the other, Mrs. Jackie Williams - formerly of Ilford in Essex, but now living in the town of Saltdean, near Brighton, in Sussex.

It’s an argument that we’ve heard time and time again. Mobile network wants to install a base station, but the residents don’t want it in their area. It’s commonly known as NIMBY syndrome (’not in my back yard’), and is usually masked by lots of whining about radiation, glowing pets and how no one could possibly ever want to use a mobile in the area.

This one is a bit different though. Have a look at this quote from the article:

Mrs Williams, of Heathfield Avenue, said: “Children play on this piece of land. It is a lovely little green and lovely plot of England. We moved from Ilford last year where it was too dangerous for children to play outside. It’s great to be able to see them free to play here like we used to in the Fifties and it would be such a shame if that was taken away from them.”

So the argument isn’t the usual one, it appears. Nope - the reason they don’t want T-Mobile installing a replica telegraph pole and a couple of green boxes is it’ll suddenly propel the area in to the 21st century, and mean the kids can’t play outside anymore.

The real irony of it? About half way down the page there’s a whopping great advert for T-Mobile.

tmobilestorygrab

So if you’re planning a trip to Saltdean soon, and use T-Mobile, it might be wise to check your coverage. Or keep away from areas resembling a 1950’s scene with children merrily skipping down the road.

Nokia to offer ‘classic’ handset

Link: Nokia Launches “Classic” Handset

The Nokia 3109 classic is a well-balanced package for consumers and companies who appreciate simplicity and value for money. Functional for office use, the Nokia 3109 classic includes email with attachments, and synchronizes calendars and to-do lists with personal computers through its USB connection. The memory of the Nokia 3109 classic is also expandable to 2GB with a microSD memory card.

It seems to be such great value for money that Nokia haven’t got any spare cash for a photographer - a quick scan of other news sources and even the related Nokia press release brings up nothing. So until they decide to let the world see the delights of their new handset, we’ll all just have to believe them that it really exists :)

Helicopter to block mobile calls in Sydney

Link: Mobile blocking helicopter to trail Bush in Sydney | The Register

Interesting news has emerged this afternoon about a plan to block mobile phone calls during US President George W. Bush’s trip to Australia.

Conjecture around the phone-jamming helicopter has arisen as a result of its appearance in attendance on Mr Bush at the 2005 APEC summit in South Korea. Reporters covering the conference said that a Black Hawk chopper would shadow the presidential motorcade, and as it passed overhead mobile phones would lose touch with the local network.

More at the Sydney Daily Telegraph.

One of those days…

After talking about his experience with mobile phone retailers last week, SMS Text News reader Ben Harvey is back with a little Friday afternoon entertainment. Just don’t ask him about his day…

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I’m having one of those days. Like it or not, you and your mobile are partners and, like an old, married couple, one of you wears the trousers in the relationship and the other one merely pays for everything. And I’m afraid to break this to you, but you’re not the one who has to worry about catching his dong in his zip.

I’m having one of those days. A day that’s hit me with a nasty mix of bugs and idiots, all channelled through my handset like ghosts through a ouija-board.  Bugs can, of course, be anything; your handset won’t synch with your laptop. The router at Caffé Nero needs to be reset but the work-experience boy behind the counter doesn’t know how to do it, so instead of happily sniggering at The Register whilst drinking your coffee you’re stuck trying to decrypt that one Italian tabloid that’s always left in the bloody paper-rack.

…we’ve all been there…

Idiots, on the other hand, should be avoidable, but they always manage to pester and annoy – the call-centre agent ringing “to see if you’re happy with your package”. Some anonymous spiv on the make who spams you with business cards simply because you’re at the same meeting as him and he now wants you in his “human web”. Or – and call me old-fashioned, here – you just have a bad phone call, one which terminates with you flinging your phone at the wall and screaming “well, f*** you then!”.

…I mean, seriously, the Samaritans aren’t what they used to be…

I’m having one of THOSE days, a mix of technology not doing what it’s designed to, of people not doing what they’re supposed to and life – at least, that portion of it pumped through fibre-optics truck cabling, a mast or two and thence into my delicate little ear-hole – isn’t going quite according to plan. You look down at your handset, you feel the weight of it in your hand and think…I wish I could be rid of you. Just for a day.

But there’s an old saying. Beware of what you wish for.

This is a big ask, but I’m going to imagine, now, that that wish came true. Imagine a world without your mobile. It’s such a vital, vital thing to so many of us now that it’s hard to re-adjust your head to a time – before 3G, before colour LCDs, before text messaging, before the car-phone – when the only calls you could make were from chunky lumps of plastic that lurked on your desk and had a curly wire stuck up their arse.

What is it…say, fifteen years? 180 months of the most phenomenal development that any industry in the history of history has ever, ever seen. People sometimes point at the personal computer as being the prime example of a field that’s undergone incredibly swift progress; they’ll mutter things about the internet and then round off their argument with Moore’s Law, that twee, soundbitish little maxim that computing power doubles every eighteen months.

Well, I’m going to introduce you to Harvey’s Law. This is an equally twee maxim that the indispensability of your mobile – in whatever form it takes – doubles every twelve months. I have to put my hand up at this point and admit that this isn’t the first time I’ve named something after myself, Harvey’s Law joining a few other inventions (notably a modified vodka martini called Harvey’s Sugar Thermometer. It’s got jam in, you’d love it), but my point stands; again, imagine a world where you are – quite literally – tied to the telecoms network through woven strands of copper. How primitive.

Think back. Can you remember business without mobiles? It was hideous. The minute someone went more than ten meters from their desk they might as well have been on the moon. Not just for obvious derelictions of duty, like attending a meeting or driving down to a different office or branch, but even for popping out for a sandwich, for a cigarette, for a piss. Now, you can get in touch with someone in roughly four or five tiny flips of your thumb. Then –  such a long time ago – then it was a nightmarish game of telephone-tag between your secretaries. A mere ten years later (people used to call that length of time a decade, by the way. Now it’s known as a Tony) and we’re all connected through the cellular network, through the air, with secretaries now relegated to the dustbin of history, along with answering machines, cassette-tape, Ministerial Responsibility and yo-yos.

Think back. The way we socialise now is different, better, faster, more liquid. Something as simple as popping out for a drink now is ripe with possibilities – ten seconds of texting another friend, then another, to entice them out often, for example, leads to the best, most enjoyable evenings. This spontaneity is priceless. Before mobiles? You’d spend half an hour organising a handful of people to meet up. Didn’t previous generations have anything better to do with their time…?

Think back. Romance. I used to envision Victorian England to be the most hazard-fraught time to start dating – should you manage to actually get an evening alone with the object of your affections, after dodging her angry father & evading her psychotic chaperone, then you run the risk of getting fatally impaled on a shard of whalebone as you’re trying to get her bra off. But now, now I find it incredibly hard to even start to put myself in the situation of not having a mobile – it’s not just the little things (you’re in a bar, you get a girl’s number. But no phone! What do you note it down on?) but it’s critical to every stage of a relationship these days; from the opening texts, increasing in flirtyness until a date’s arranged. And then the date itself – imagine trying to meet up in anywhere in, say, Zone 1 when you can’t drop a quick voicemail to tell them that you’ll be late, or that you can’t work out just which Starbucks they actually meant, or that you can’t come at all because you’ve found someone prettier.

I actually get sent that last one a lot.

I say all of this not to harp on about why your mobile is great, or how lucky you are to have it, or just how clever you are to belong to an industry that’s advancing far faster than the bovine throngs can keep up with – I’m saying all this because, on the sort of day that I’m having, these thoughts might stop you from taking a handset-shaped chunk out of the plaster. Because, on such a day, the very last thing you need is to talk to gum-chewing Donna in Insurance Team 6.
There is, of course, one final reason why it’d be a bad idea to turn the clock back a Tony – you’d have to explain to your grandmother, again, just what a “mobile phone” was.

“That’s very modern, deary. I bet it needs a lot of wire…”

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Thanks Ben!

Fring adds Twitter support

Link: fring » Twitter inside!

I’ve been waxing lyrically about Fring to my mates after finding it a couple of weeks ago. If you don’t know about Fring, go to their website and check it out - or alternatively wait a day or two longer til I get my arse in gear and finish off the review I’ve been slaving over for this very blog :)

Anyway, some great news - Fring have just added Twitter support. This means I can use just one application for Twitter, MSN, Skype, SIP, and Google Talk. If you’ve already got Fring, you don’t have to upgrade the software - just go to Settings > Configure Services and scroll down, where you should see Twitter.

Fring have even made a nice video and put it on their blog to show you how to add Twitter.

TxtLocal win UPS business award

Congratulations to Alastair Shortland and Darren Dawes at TxtLocal for winning their local ’Best Local Business’ award in a nationwide UPS-sponsored competition judged by Dragons’ Den business guru Theo Papthitis.

Darren is, understandably, quite chuffed: ‘The purpose of the competition was to recognize local businesses that deliver that little bit extra to their customers and community. It’s a real coup to have someone of Theo Paphitis’s standing pick us out as a winner, and we are absolutely delighted.’

They’ve won themselves a free advertising campaign on their local radio station Radio Wyvern - so if you’re in the area and have the radio turned on, keep an ear out for their ad!

Q&A with Twitter founders

Link: MediaShift . Digging Deeper::Twitter Founders Thrive on Micro-Blogging Constraints | PBS

As mentioned in a post a couple of days ago, PBS tech blog MediaShift have published their interview with Twitter founders Jack Dorsey and Biz Stone.

I touched on the business model of Twitter when I posted about my experiences with Twitter the other day, and asked how they plan to make money whilst picking up the tab for my texts. Here’s a snippet from the article that asks the same question:

How does the cost of Twitter work? I know that I pay for my SMS messages through my service provider. Do you pay for text messages sent and received as well?

Dorsey: So we pay for every SMS message sent. We’re looking to get into relationships where we can minimize those costs or potentially make that a revenue stream. So that’s another thing we need to scale, and it’s a matter of figuring out the industry more than anything else.

You can read the full interview here.

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