Tracking Stuff in Mobile

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Archive for July 2007

Canadians don’t want cell service in valley

Link: Canadian valley aims to keep cellphone-free quiet - Yahoo! News

Fed up with being constantly reachable, pretty much anywhere in the world? Does your mobile have a habit of ringing while you’re on the beach, halfway up a mountain, or in the middle of a forest? You could just switch it off - or alternatively head for the rural Canadian town of New Denver, British Columbia, where officials are lobbying against a new mobile phone mast.

Yahoo! News are reporting that officials have asked cellular company Telus not to build a planned tower in the area as it will ruin the peace and quiet of the area. According to spokesman Bill Roberts, “The fact that we’re without cellphone service means that we’re able to enjoy life without the incessant sound of ringtones, immediately followed by someone’s shouted conversation. I’m quite delighted that it doesn’t work in New Denver. I’ve been chained to a cellphone.”

The article also says the Slocan Valley Economic Development Commission are planning to promote the areas “cellphone free status” as a unique reason to visit or move to the region - assuming Telus don’t switch on service to the all of around 600 people who live in the town.

(Thanks to SMS Text News reader Paul for the link)

TxtDrop.com celebrates 500k free texts

TxtDrop.com has just celebrated hitting 500,000 free text messages sent from its text messaging website. Although it’s only really of use to mobile users in North America, it’s worth looking at if you haven’t checked it out before. They’ve got downloadable desktop apps for Windows and Mac OS X, plugins for MySpace, Bebo, Xanga, Hi5 and Bolt, plus they’ve just added a neat app for the iPhone.

Congratulations to SMS Text News reader Nate and his team for passing this impressive landmark - according to reports they’re on track to hit 100,000 messages per month shortly, so the million message mark isn’t far away..

iPhone in security hole shocker

Link: Exploiting the iPhone

It’s only been a few weeks since the launch of Apple’s long awaited iPhone, but already someone’s found a security vulnerability - and a rather serious one at that.

The hack - discovered by ex-NSA (and now principle security analyst) security guru Dr. Charles A. Miller, allows someone to potentially take control of an iPhone through a WiFi connection or an external website running malicious code.

Apple are reported to be on the case, although details of a patch to fix the hole have yet to be announced.

One good thing about the floods here in the UK

Picture 10

Picture 10
Originally uploaded by smstextnews.

There’s quite a lot of people across the United Kingdom sitting, depressed — and with good cause — as they stare around at three feet of water as far as the eye can see.

Some folk are without drinking water. Some houses ruined. Roads flooded. Traffic and travel chaos.

One good thing — apart from the obvious fact that, to my knowledge, there’s been no loss of life so far — is the spread and influence of eye witness mobile media.

With hundreds of thousands of people in the country sporting Nokia N95 style 5 megapixel camera handsets — and almost every new handset on the market coming with a 2 megapixel or larger lens, it’s rare to flick up a news website without seeing user contributed imagery and videos.

And it’s brilliant.

I love it. I do really enjoy viewing pictures and video taken by real people on the ground. Like the video I saw on the BBC site earlier this week featuring a guy ’swimming’ in a flooded road. So inventive was the footage and so illustrating of the magnitude of the flooding in this particular area, the clip even made the BBC main news broadcast.

It’s much better seeing than hearing about ‘3 feet of water’. Years ago one or two photographers might have made it to a disaster area within 5-10 hours or within a day. Then a few camera teams would limp around and maybe charter a helicopter. Nowadays I’m loving the fact that the folk on the ground are able to capture high quality records of their experiences — and then transmit them swiftly for dissemination to us all.

Almost everyone’s a snapper nowadays too.

There are, for example, six Nokia E and N Series handsets in my train carriage at the moment (I counted) excluding the two in my laptop bag. There are only nine people dotted about the carriage this evening — it’s quite empty — but I’m pretty confident that if Brad Pitt boarded the train then vomitted over the train guard, all of the unassuming digital natives around me would have the incident captured and broadcast to the world in moments.

The more that news stories are peppered with user generated content obtained principally from mobile handses, the more people are going to be educated about the network and device capabilities — which is only good for the industry.

One lead news story on the BBC supplemented with compelling mobile video footage is worth a billion ‘please use your mobile’ adverts from a mobile operator.

Cases in point?

- SMS Text News reader Paul caught this BBC gallery featuring a photo of the flooded Vodafone office taken by an employee (I think).

- The second link on Sky News right now reads ‘Your Latest Flood Pics’.

Mirror mirror on the wall..

… How can I spend $10k on something cool?

Try one of these. It’s a SMS-enabled mirror, designed by Robert Stadler of French design group Radi Designers. Messages are displayed as luminous text on the mirror itself, and it’ll start scrolling the message when someone stands near it.

A snip at just $10,000 (about £5,000 at current exchange rates) - but hurry, there’s very limited stocks!

HTC and the curse of the weak displays

A few friends of mine have HTC phones. HTC? You know, the guys that make that nice Touch handset - the one that Ewan quite likes. I’ve really been into Symbian phones over the past few years (both S60 and UIQ), and never really considered a Windows Mobile device. However if someone had asked me up until a few weeks ago which one would I recommend, I wouldn’t hesitate to send them off to get an HTC unit.

Then I witnessed a strange thing. In the same weekend, two friends had their screens completely fail, both within a couple of hours of each other. We’re not just talking a slight failure, or maybe a few duff pixels: oh no, we’re talking complete and castastrophic display failure. There’s no sign of physical damage to the plastic part of the screen, not even a scratch.

They’re both with Orange, so a quick phone call, and Orange being their usual unhelpful self (’have you tried switched it off and on again?’), and the next day they got their handsets replaced by courier.

Over the weekend, the screen went *again* one of these two week old replacement handsets. That’s it in the picture at the top of the article. It looks like someones shot at the middle of the screen - but again not a single scratch on the plastic. They haven’t been dropped, kicked, sat on, or anything obvious like that - the displays just seem to be randomly failing.

One phone having a problem is just bad luck. Two - hmm, perhaps a concidence. Three phones from two people in as many weeks? It reeks of a manufacturing fault, or a problem with a batch. Orange just keep replacing the handsets under insurance - but how long will that last? 

Incidently in all my years in mobile, with more handsets than I can remember under my belt, I’ve never had a broken screen on a phone. Seen it happen once on an HP iPAQ, but that was after serious daily abuse and a catastrophic dropping incident.

Apm’d and SunRocket MVNOs leave customers networkless

Another one here by Om that I wanted to document:

Link: GigaOM What about the people? «

Sometime later today, there is a good chance Amp’d, the beleagured mobile virtual network provider will turn off its service, leaving over 100,000 of its customers in the lurch. A few days ago, SunRocket shuttered its doors, leaving 200,000 subscribers in the lurch.

I’m sure their MNO parents — whoever’s backbone these customers are actually using, will be delighted to welcome the subscribers and maintain their mobile service…?

mig33 has 6 million users in 200 countries

mig33Caught this on Om’s feed this morning. It looks like the team at mig33 have been taking their shreddies. 6 million users? Wow!

Link: GigaOM mig33 has 6 million mobile users «

mig33, a combination mobile instant messenger, chat rooms and international calling card service based in Burlingame, CA., says signed up six million cell phone users in 200 countries. The service is particularly popular in countries like Bangladesh where international long distance rates are high. Unlike other VoIP services, mig33 works on even the most basic phones, and don’t require a Wi-Fi connection for the calls.

Check out mig33 at mig33.com.

Does your Nokia N95 run at 3.5g?

mobile speed test 3.5g

mobile speed test 3.5g
Originally uploaded by smstextnews.

I picked up on a comment that SMS Text News reader, James Whatley, contributed recently on the Super 3G post. He said he already had a 3.5g icon on his Nokia N95.

I asked him for a screenshot and he sent me this one double-quick. Look at that! A little mini 3.5g icon!

Hmm.

Mine doesn’t have that….

.. because I haven’t done the software update on the firmware. I’ll sort that out. You can get the software to upgrade your Nokia from here.

National Rail’s WAP site; excellent .. with a but

national rail wapStanding in Euston Station I got out the Nokia N95 and flicked up National Rail enquiries wapsite, which, by the way, is helpfully linked on the T-Zones site.

The service is extremely, extremely efficient in telling you train times. A lot of thought has gone into making as few clicks as possible and displaying all salient information.

The only issue for me this morning was it didn’t give me the train journey status — to let me know what was screwed up where.

So I ended up having to do it analogue style, which is never a fun experience: I had to ‘ask’ a human. Who, it turns out, didn’t know where Darlington (my destination) was. She asked another human, who then unhelpfully explained to me that I needed to travel via King’s Cross.

I then had to arse about, ANALOGUE style, explaining to this second human, that I had come from King’s Cross — me and the other 1,000 people crowding the terminal — because the trains were screwed from there.

‘Connect at Liverpool then,’ was the very uninformed response from this information clerk. Font of all limited, almost helpful information.

I would have asked the clerk to do a lookup at the station information desk, but there was a 25+ person queue.

So I sat down in the middle of the concourse, whipped out the Apple, connected courtesy of The Cloud WiFi, visited the big National Rail site on Safari and in 40 seconds (including network load times) worked out that I could connect in Sheffield.

Ok, so the trains to Sheffield were packed. But I had the relevant information.

What a shame this whole thing isn’t quite mobilised yet.

By the way, if you’d like to chek out the National Rail WAP site from the comfort of your computer, click here — it’ll pre-load the wicked Wapsilon emulator and then load the National Rail site.

People who misuse hands-free kits really wind me up

I’ve been going to and fro between King’s Cross, St Pancras and Euston Station for about three hours this morning. Total arse.

Having established that there was insufficient space on the Sheffield train (”change at Sheffield for another mind numbing trip to X, Y and Z prior to arriving at Darlington”), I headed back to my place here in London to de-sweat.

On the escalator, I was barged out the way by a chap in a rubbish pinstripe suit (unforgivable) with an equally cheap hands-free kit.

He was holding the microphone bit continuously in front of his mouth which, because it was a piece of crap hands-free kit, would normally hang around his belly button.

I can’t stand to see this. It really winds me up. What is the point? Just talk on the handset. The whole REASON for a hands-free kit is that you use it without your hands.

Gahh.

On a lighter note, my Jawbone bluetooth hands-free thing should arrive soon.

I took a picture of him with the N95.

But when I was walking back here, considering exactly what I should write, I decided that to publish his picture could well be bad news.

National Rail’s live repurposing doesn’t work on Nokias yet

I was trying to use the National Rail site to find out why the trains were screwed up this morning. My mistake was to use my Nokia E61i which, sadly, was interpreted as a full size computer by the National Rail site. Hundreds of KB later and my device was beginning to run out of memory to display the page. Arse.

It seems the Nokia E61i … or any Nokia E-series, isn’t considered anywhere near a ‘PDA’ — bit annoying. However if you use any of the following devices, you will, I understand, have a perfectly wicked, customised experience:

The new National Rail Enquiries website is designed to allow access from a number of devices and web browsers at www.nationalrail.co.uk. A summary list of devices supported is given below. If you have a request for support of another device, please let us know by filling in a feedback form.

Supported PDA Devices:

Pocket PC
Sony Ericsson P900 and P901
Hewlett Packard Ipaq
Windows CE
BlackBerry

I’m pleased to note they have Blackberry support — but surely the same coding they’re using for the Pocket PC would work fine for Nokia E61s?

This box of tricks just arrived

22072007199

22072007199
Originally uploaded by smstextnews.

I’ve been doing one of those 6 hotels in 7 nights thing recently so I hadn’t managed to get back to pick up this box of tricks that just arrived.

Any guesses on what’s inside?

Vodafone UK drop Nokia N76

Link: Vodafone withdraw N76 due to returns numbers

According to All About Symbian, Vodafone have decided to stop selling the Nokia N76 multimedia phone with immediate effect.

I doubt most Nokia N76 buyers in the UK (it’s been an exclusive with Vodafone, remember) were reading my review, so I’d love to know the reasons given by users, but a reliable source is quoted as saying that “Vodafone has decided to withdraw the Nokia N76 with immediate effect. This is due to the high level of customer returns of the phone.” Can anyone at Vodafone fill in more detail?

Have you got an N76 on Vodafone? Add a comment and let us know!

OLD NEWS: Vodafone Newbury HQ under water

Ewan here. Vanity publishing galore. I forgot that Alex has posted a note on Vodafone’s HQ flooding last week and I went and spent quite a bit of time creating some art for this post.

Alex then wisely put this article to ‘draft’ status last week.

However it’s time to publish, I reckon. It is, after all, Friday afternoon. It’ll get it out of the draft queue too. I couldn’t bring myself to delete it…

- - - - -

Picture 45Hello to SMS Text News reader and Newbury resident ‘P’, who emailed to confirm he’d be well up for coming along to the SMS Text News Unlimited Drinks — and also to tell me that Vodafone’s HQ has ‘got it quite bad’ with the recent rains.

‘Most of the ground floor is flooded,’ he reports, ‘with water half way up your leg in the car park!’

Staff were apparently sent home at lunchtime.

Well flooding is a total arse, especially when half of the Atlantic descends upon you within a few minutes. I’ve no doubt Voda’s Newbury HQ will be back to 100% shortly.

I wonder just how disrupted the HQ team has been based on the fact that one imagines they’re all well equipped to work remotely at least for a few days (3G cards all round?).

(Above right: Artists impression of flooded Vodafone HQ)

3.5G to get upgrade by end of 2007

UK mobile operators T-Mobile, 3 and Vodafone have confirmed plans to begin rolling out the High Speed Uplink Packet Access (HSUPA) standard in the UK by the end of the year.

The technology - which uses packet scheduling - takes the performance enhancements found in the High-Speed Downlink Packet Access (HSDPA) standard and brings them to the upload side of a data connection. The net effect is a balancing of the theoretical maximum upload and download speeds.

Vodafone have already launched the technology in Germany, and will begin rolling out their UK service later this year. Rivals T-Mobile and 3 will also be aiming to start upgrading their network by the end of the year, with Orange planning to introduce the HSUPA service in 2008.

The only UK operator not figuring in these plans is O2 - who have at present not announced plans for HSPA enhancements to their network.

(Thanks to SMS Text News reader Mike for providing additional information to correct this article)

Mobile geeks of London unite!

Do you consider yourself a mobile geek? Do you live, work or hang out in (or within easy reach of) London?

SMS Text News reader James Whatley has just launched a Facebook group called Mobile Geeks of London. It’s open to anyone (assuming you’ve got a Facebook account, of course), and promises “chat, discussions, and general merriment.”

To join up, just click this link. There’s rumours of the first group get-together in London this coming week - and if you ask James nicely he might bring his iPhone along.. :)

By the way if you’re on Facebook, we’ve also got our very own SMS Text News group. Sign up, stop by and say hello!

Google buys into UK femtocell maker

In a move that is sure to send shivers down the spine of the traditional telcos of the world, Internet giant Google today announced they’d invested in Ubiqisys Ltd., a UK femtocell manufacturer.

Other investors in the latest round of funding, which totalled $25m, included existing backers Accel Partners, Atlas Venture and Advent Venture Partners.

Ubiqisys plan to start consumer tests on their home GSM gateway products towards the end of the year, with commercial availability due in the second quarter of 2008.

The total now invested by Google in the company is $42m, and word on the street is that Google are building a warchest to buy so called ‘guard band’ low power GSM licenses - an essential if they plan to offer a direct to consumer service.

Vodafone’s new ad music comes back to haunt them

Link: Vodafone sinks to new low | The Register

If you’re a UK TV viewer, you might have seen Vodafone’s recent ad campaign for their new ‘improved’ mobile internet service. The ad features raining watches, with the song “Little April Showers” from Disney’s Bambi playing in the background.

If you haven’t seen it, or want a reminder, here’s the ad (courtesy of YouTube):

In a rather ironic twist of fate, Vodafone’s UK HQ in Newbury, Berkshire is currently knee deep in water, folloing torrential rain and flash flooding that lashed parts of the UK on Friday. The nearby River Lanbourn burst it’s banks, and forced some 3000 staff have been moved to alternative locations (preferably on slightly higher ground). With more heavy rain forecast for the coming weekend it’s unsure whether they’ll be back in business by Monday morning.

Needless to say the network shouldn’t be affected by this small soggy setback -although it is possible whoever chose the music and the concept for the ad might be thinking twice about coming into work on Monday morning :)

Text death driver gets four years

Link: BBC NEWS | England | Text death driver gets four years

We reported on this story last month - and today a judge passed sentence in the case.

A teenage driver who caused the death of a woman in a crash as she sent a mobile phone text message has been sent to a young offenders’ institute.

Rachel Begg, 19, of Whinbank in Ponteland, admitted sending the message shortly before the collision on the A696, near Newcastle Airport.

O2 drop the ball on video and voice shortcodes

Link: O2’s failure to launch voice and video shortcodes ‘holds up entire industry’

According to a couple of industry players, UK mobile operator O2 is “holding back the entire industry” by not being able to offer video or voice shortcodes.

Speaking to The Inquirer, MX Telecom’s Mark Fitzgerald has said: “You couldn’t have an X Factor vote, for example, which worked for everybody in the nation except those on O2. So customers won’t buy into the concept while one network’s subscribers are excluded.”

Meanwhile Jeremy Flynn from mobile video specialist D2See asks:  “Given the amount of money O2 has made from SMS shortcodes, how come they find it so difficult to provide equivalent voice and video shortcodes?”

“There are over 100 video shortcodes in use in UK - how come they don’t seem to want to let their consumers access these services, and make money from this?”

Ben Harvey never liked i-Mode

Harvey’s back today with a view on i-Mode and why browsing the web on mobile is a total arse…

- - - - - -

One of the big stories this week – apart from David Beckham signing up for a pub-team in LA – was that O2 are junking their i-Mode service after two years of not managing to persuade people to access the internet over their mobiles.

This announcement was greeted with unhappy surprise by O2 shareholders. However, it’s been a stonking liability for a while now – as the article above explains in terms that even I can comprehend, the basic problem was that O2 say they have a UK usership of 18 million (…hmmmn…), but only 3% or so actually ever bothered signing up to i-Mode.

3% has always been one of my favourite percentages, by the way, because it’s a whore to whatever you need it for; it’s small enough to be a damning indictment of failure (and nicely ironic, given 3’s own ventures into the internet) but large enough just to give you the tiniest sliver of hope. For example, I imagine that O2 management will having to be restrained bodily by their PA staff, lest they hurl themselves, Lemming-like, from atop their office-blocks, but then again, if 3% of the girls that I asked out for a drink said yes then I would be ecstatically drowning in my own joy-fluids.

It’s all a question of perspective.

However, it does raise the following question: i-Mode was meant to be a bridging-step between WAP and the regular, grown-up internet. It was meant to provide all the services that you need when you’re out on the move in a simple, low-bandwidth fashion, to the extent that the providers of these services (tickets, news-streams, the usual suspects) actually went to the trouble of making them i-Mode friendly. So you’ve got a service that’s fantastically easy to use, a Billy & Johnny version of the net that even your parents could find their way around, and what happened?

Nobody bloody used it.

The mobile industry has always had a strange relationship with the internet. Ever since handsets went from being cinderblocks (barked into by brace-clad brokers when the 80s turned into the 90s) and actually got themselves a screen everyone could instantly see that it was obvious how the two would grow up together, find that they had more & more in common, settle down, have a few kids. That sort of thing.

It’s very much like Friends - you knew, from the very start, that Rachel and Ross will get married and live happily ever after. That analogy is a good one, actually, because it stretches to embrace that, even though it’s a fait accompli, you just wish you could cut out the nine years of false-starts, miscommunications, tears, tantrums & slapstick.

People used to point at the glacially-slow takeoff of mobile internet-use (glacially-slow, at least, into the vast, bovine herds of the Great Unwashed) as being due to price-sensitivity. They thought that the peasantry of this country had a demand-elasticity as saggy as their bingo-wings. And that was a good excuse, for a while, because the £/MB rate was a touch high to start with. But now, with so many packages coming with free or suicidally-cheap download-rates, why isn’t every bugger lapping it up?

You can lead a horse to water, but you can’t make it drink.

When I was writing this article I started to think of all the possible reasons why it’s taking so much effort to port the net over to mobiles. Why had some of the most brilliant minds on the planet, when it comes to marketing & design & technology, why had they not been able to produce one killer-app, one set of utilities so useful, or interesting, or just plain amusing enough to get the residual millions to actually use their handsets to their full, deliciously-lucrative potential?

The answer, unfortunately, is simple. It’s not because consumers can’t get to the internet through their handsets. It’s not because it’s too expensive. It’s not about firewalls or socket-layers or the vagaries of GPRS in rural areas.

It’s because the internet is completely incompatible, as an idea, to mobile phones.

The internet is about two things - it’s about email, and it’s about content. Email over mobile phones is either short and to the point (thus becoming a text-message, and I think we’ve kinda got that sorted) or so clunky to input into your device that you get pissed-off and buy a Blackberry.

And trying to put internet content through mobile handsets is a misnomer - magazines & tabloids are the size they are for a reason; printers have had a few hundred years of cut-throat evolution to decide the right balance between the amount of data that humans like to be presented with, in one go, and the size of the medium that they like that data to be presented upon. It should come as no surprise to you that your laptop is roughly the same dimensions as your copy of GQ.

All of this points, quite logically, to the inescapable conclusion that anyone that tries to display run-of-the-mil internet-pages (big, bandwidth-heavy) through a mobile phone (small, bandwidth-allergic) is an idiot.

So – it doesn’t matter how high a resolution you can squeeze onto your handset – if it’s not a tablet, and if it’s not a PDA, then it’s going to be crummy at web-browsing. Why has it taken the industry so long to realise this? I don’t care about how you compress or render text or images. I don’t care about your zoom-functions. These are bolt-on patches, jerry-rigged half-measures to beat the internet into a pulp that’s fine enough to be digested by the handsets that 90% of the populace have nestled in their coat pocket. And I certainly don’t care that the Japanese have been doing it for years – firstly, they’re bonkers and, secondly, they’re cheating; it’s a lot easier for them, on account of having those dodgy letters in their alphabet that mean a few thousand words each.

But if it’s a losing game, why play at all? Firstly, it’s inevitable. Someone, somewhere is going to come up with a clever way of making stacks of cash out of this, and so it might as well be you. Secondly, all it’s going to take, really, is someone somewhere being fiendish enough to make it indispensable. Imagine, if you will, Facebook through your handset – something basic enough to work cleanly but structured enough to remain its utility. I don’t mean m.facebook.com - current rubbish that requires you to enter your password everytime you want to login via your handset. Whoever it is that comes up with FacebookMobile that works properly is going to laughing all the way to the bank.

And who knows – maybe they might trailblaze a new way to chip the best bits off the internet that isn’t a complete waste of our valuable time…

Texting can lead to confusion

Link: The Chaser - Text message lacks nuance

Critics have slammed an SMS sent by account executive Morgan Teuber to a group of his friends, claiming the tone of his brief communication is unclear. The text message, which stated a desire “2 C TRANSFORMERS ITLL B COOL”, has divided recipients, who are unable to reach consensus on whether Teuber was serious, joking or something else entirely.

“I’m not sure what to write back,” said SMS receiver Karen Hite. “Both ‘lol yeah right’ and ‘how about thurs nite?’ are problematic, given that I’m not sure what he’s is trying to say. I don’t want to enthusiastically agree and look like an idiot…but on the other hand, I don’t want to make a joke about it and hurt Morgan’s feelings if he really does want to see Transformers.”

SMS helps First Direct customers manage their money

According to UK bank First Direct, customers using their transaction alerts by text service are less likely to go overdrawn.

The bank, a division of HSBC, say that nearly a third of customers use the service, and they send around 2.6 million text messages every month.

According to First Direct’s Rob Skinner, the service is useful to customers because “people can be alerted when they are likely to be going into the red”.

“It helps them manage their money a little better, particularly when they are living busy lives,” he explained, adding: “The mobile phone is something which we carry around with us, it’s almost a remote control for our lives.”

LocatioNet launches free mapping and navigation service, amAze

amAze_HighScaleMaps_4X16cm_300dpiThis is a piece of genius. You know when you’ve just taken your N95 out of its packaging and you wait patiently for the GPS to activate… THEN you flick up the Maps application… only to find that you’ve only got the basics. Total arse. If you want everything — the enhanced, proper service — you have to download and pay for it.

Not anymore.

amAze is LocatioNet’s free mapping and navigation service which works on regular mass-market mobile handsets. It gives regular java-enabled handsets access to mapping, satellite imagery, route-planning, weather forecasts and locally relevant search information. AND voice-guided navigation if you’ve got yourself a bluetooth GPS — or if you’ve got an N95 and patience.

I met LocatioNet’s President, Ofer Tziperman, a wicked chap, this week and he demonstrated the technology to me. It’s very smart. They’re able to give the end user free access to the service (obviously, data charges apply if you’re stupid enough to still be with an operator busy hosing you for data fees) by adopting an ad-funded approach. Income is generated via advertisements (i.e. cash machines displayed on the map) as well as sponsorship of the service.

LocatioNet are no flash in the pan. They’ve been around for over 16 years and they know exactly what they’re doing. For example, the amAze application doesn’t do much calculation. No. That would take a load of handset resources and is thoroughly inefficient. Instead, when you need a route calculated, the details are fired off to the amAze server that does the computing and within a second, the results are fired back to the handset. Very smart indeed.

This would be a great application for the likes of Shell, Texaco, BP or somebody to give to their customers.

Get yourself a free copy of amAze at www.amazegps.com. I’ve got more to post, including a particularly wicked example of how a 14 year old using amAze on his bike beat Denmark’s most experienced GPS navigation expert armed to the teeth with oodles of standard Garmin GPS technology. Heh, excellent.

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