Tracking Stuff in Mobile

Daily news and opinion for 250,000 industry executives and mobile fanatics.

Archive for September 2007

EQO launches free mobile messaging software

EQO Communications today announced the launch of its free mobile messaging software worldwide. For the first time, EQO is offering free text and IM services in every country in the world including: India, Indonesia, the Philippines and Russia.

EQO (pronounced “echo”) is a free, easy to use application for everyday mobile phones that lets users send free text messages to other EQO users, and chat for free on MSN, AIM, Yahoo!, Google Talk, ICQ and Jabber. EQO users can quickly build a network of friends who also use EQO so that they can text more people for free. The application automatically populates their EQO phonebook with all of their contacts from their mobile phone’s address book. Users can then invite friends to get EQO with a single click.

EQO users can also send international text messages to people who do not use EQO, at a savings of up to 70%. To celebrate this launch, all new users will receive 25 free text messages: to anyone, anywhere. Mobile instant messaging on EQO is always free.

“We developed EQO to make it easier and cheaper for people to chat using their mobile phone,” said EQO Chief Executive Officer Bill Tam. “It’s easy to get, and accessible to everyone, so they can text and IM without having to worry about the costs.”

Australian newspaper publishes every text they get

Link: Northern Territory News

Australian newspaper The Northern Territory News apparently receives so many text messages from it’s readers they have trouble publishing them all. So what’s the solution? Chuck the whole lot, lock stock and barrel, on their website. No editing, no spelling correction, just raw and as they got sent.

Have you sent a text message to the newspaper … and it hasn’t been published? Check here every day. www.ntnews.com.au will publish more text messages online and in the same format as they appear in the Northern Territory News.

We understand our readers want to express their opinions about stories and events in their own backyard, on national issues and what’s happening around the world. Be heard - send your txt messages to 0428-NTNEWS (0428-686-397).

DoubleClick launch mobile ad platform

Digital marketing technology provider DoubleClick have launched a new service aimed at companies who want to advertise on mobile sites.

The DoubleClick Mobile solution integrates the operational processes for scheduling, targeting, selecting and delivering
ads on mobile web pages with that of existing digital channels. As a result, media companies can now use DoubleClick¹s publisher solutions to sell and manage inventory across online display, rich media, video and mobile.

The integration of DoubleClick Mobile with DoubleClick’s DART for Publishers (DFP) platform means everyone involved in managing digital advertising campaigns — ad sales staff, ad operations staff, account managers, traffickers, metrics analysts, campaign specialists and others — can easily support mobile advertising responsibilities within their current role. Across roles and responsibilities in a publishing organisation, the familiar DART interface makes managing mobile campaigns as simple as managing any other type of campaign. For example traffickers upload mobile creatives, set the duration of mobile campaigns and designate targeting criteria much as they would for a rich media or display campaign.

“Publishers are starting to see mobile as an exciting revenue growth area as budgets move from experimental to mainstream. Our clients want to take on this opportunity and sell mobile display advertising directly,” said Ari
Paparo, DoubleClick’s vice president of rich media and emerging technologies. “As media companies begin to offer integrated digital ad packages to advertisers that include online display, rich media, video and mobile, everyone wins. The launch of DoubleClick Mobile marks an important step in bringing mobile into the mainstream digital advertising ecosystem.”

“Being the first organisation to implement DoubleClick Mobile, we believe that 2008 is going to be the year that monetising mobile channels through an ad-supported models becomes a strategic priority for our customers,” said Heleen van Oord, Managing Partner of DQ&A. “We’re excited by DoubleClick’s ability to couple their understanding of digital marketing
with the unique needs of mobile.”

Seeker Wireless and HP bring mobile fixed lines to Eastern Europe

Seeker Wireless and HP have announced their joint Fixed Mobile Substitution (FMS) solution has been deployed to deliver
virtual fixed-line services via mobile phones in Eastern Europe.

The solution has been deployed by one of the largest mobile operators in Eastern Europe and is providing consumers and businesses with “fixed-like” telephony services in the home or office via mobile phones. The solution eliminates the need for cables and outlets in the wall, enabling subscribers to benefit from fast and easy access to telephone services, which also include a range of value added services such as SMS.

Colin I’Anson at HP says: “Fixed Mobile Substitution is an important part of mobile operator strategy as it enables operators to expand their business and drive revenue. We partnered with Seeker Wireless because of their innovative approach to zone detection and their ability to make FMS truly profitable for operators.”

Dr Chris Drane, Chief Executive Officer at Seeker Wireless says: “FMS services are particularly significant in emerging markets where traditional fixed-line infrastructure is less prevalent. In these markets, FMS solutions like SeekerZone(tm) enable mobile operators to leapfrog traditional fixed-line services to capture additional usage and revenue. The innovative technology behind SeekerZone(tm) ensures that mobile operators maximise revenues from FMS services by delivering high
in-zone reliability and tight zones around the home or office.”

London gets mobile tourist guide

Link: Internet Travel News - Mobile guide launches for London
The rather curiously named Do Me Mobile Limited have launched “Do Me … London“, a mobile-based multimedia guide to London.

Presented by professional tour guide and actor Ben Whitehead (and his five alter-egos, apparently), the guide gives you narrated stories, interactive maps, photos, and all sorts of other exclusive information.

“I want to take people to the real London, through its dark alleyways and hidden secrets,” said Whitehead. “Now whenever you go somewhere in London, you always have me as your guide, as long as you have your phone.”

“Do Me … London is an entirely new kind of guide, using cutting-edge technology to bring the city to your fingertips,” said Duncan Robertson, Do Me Mobile Limited’s Managing Director. “It’s a must-do for anyone looking to get the most out of their time in London.”

Low cost airline launches check-in reminders

Link: Monarch launches mobile check-in
You’ve heard of airlines offering check-in by mobile, but a service that reminds you it’s time to go to the gate? That’s exactly what el cheapo carrier Monarch have just unveiled.

The service, aptly called Monarch Mobile, will give passengers information about delays, where to check in and even their booking reference, four hours before departure time. Then, a couple of hours before takeoff,the airline will very kindly spam you with their latest exclusive offers.

Once you’ve checked in, and made yourself comfortable with a tanker of lager in the airport bar, preferably somewhere that you conveniently forget you have a flight to catch, Monarch will send you a text when it’s time to head to your departure gate.

Whether Monarch will also send you a reminder not to get rude and abusive on their plane remains to be seen.

Punters to splash $12bn on mobile gambling by 2010

The increasing deployment of multiple mobile payment technologies and liberalisation of remote gambling legislation in key markets is expected to push total annual wagers on mobile phones to nearly $12bn by 2010, according to a new report by Juniper Research.

Mobile lotteries are expected to be the most popular service by the end of the forecast period, with more than 380m users worldwide. According to report author Dr Windsor Holden, “Mobile lotteries have already experienced significant levels of adoption in the Far East, while we envisage that European state lotteries will increasingly embrace the mobile environment in the medium term.”

The report added that growth would also be fuelled by market liberalisation such as the UK’s Gambling Act which came into force on September 1, and by proposed amendments to existing legislation elsewhere in Europe. Furthermore, it suggested that in the longer term, there would also be opportunities in the US market.

“The intimations from the US are that the act will be repealed or at least reformed,” said Holden. “Should that be the case, then, facilitated by location-based technologies, in-state mobile lotteries, betting and possibly casino services will be available in that market by 2010.”

Truphone demo world’s first VoIP calls on an iPhone

VoIP on an iPhone [photo courtesy of Blognation]Link: blognation USA » Blog Archive » BN Exclusive: TruPhone to Launch VoIP Client on iPhone

Blognation are reporting they’ve witnessed the first ever VoIP phone calls made from an Apple iPhone, courtesy of mobile VoIP provider Truphone. It’s still early days - the demo apparently required a bit of phone hacking - but this could be an important milestone in the iPhone’s early history.

To say the application isn’t yet ready for prime time would be a pretty major understatement as it currently requires the use of terminal on the iPhone to tell the iPhone to use its on-board SIP stack to place the call over WiFi instead of via the SIM card. To use the terminal application, in turn requires that you first Jailbreak the phone using an application like iBrickr or iFuntastic. This is not an application for the inexperienced or the faint of heart.

Interestingly enough, you don’t need to SIM unlock the phone to use another network - it’ll work fine in it’s standard AT&T (and soon to be O2, T-Mobile and Orange) flavour.

Word is Truphone for the iPhone will be available for beta testing in about a month’s time - head on over to this page and register your details if you’re interested in giving it a spin.

Update: Andy Abramson has got a video clip of the Truphone on iPhone demo here

Mobiles help get news out of Burma

Unless you’ve been hiding from all news sources for the past few days, you’ll know that things are a little fragile in Burma at the moment. The quite highly respected monks are out protesting against the military dictatorship that is the government, and it’s like a tinderbox out there.

So, what has this got to do with mobiles? Here’s a snippet from Channel 4 News ‘Snowmail‘, written by veteran news presenter Jon Snow:

Continuously amazing pictures coming out of Burma, many courtesy of the myriad mobile phones that this otherwise desperately deprived population have managed to muster, others via an unusual route we’re exploring on the programme tonight. And rather as in eastern Europe, the power of those pictures flooding back into the country through every known electronic device is itself clearly bringing more and more people onto the streets.

So they’re not only rallying the population by mobiles, but footage from the ‘front line’ is also getting to the world’s media via mobile. We’ve all seen an increase in user-contributed mobile-generated content of major events here in the West, but it’s certainly something when you hear that in a country as stricken as Burma, they’re making every effort to get the word out using what little mobile technology they can get their hands on.

iPhone unlocking is dangerous, says Apple

This came in this morning from Apple..

Apple has discovered that many of the unauthorized iPhone unlocking programs available on the Internet cause irreparable damage to the iPhone’s software, which will likely result in the modified iPhone becoming permanently inoperable when a future Apple-supplied iPhone software update is installed. Apple plans to release the next iPhone software update, containing many new features including the iTunes Wi-Fi Music Store (www.itunes.com), later this week.

Apple strongly discourages users from installing unauthorized unlocking programs on their iPhones. Users who make unauthorized modifications to the software on their iPhone violate their iPhone software license agreement and void their warranty. The permanent inability to use an iPhone due to installing unlocking software is not covered under the iPhone’s warranty.

I could add my thoughts, but I’d rather hear yours - and I’m sure there’s plenty of opinion on this :)

Purple Labs raise $14.5m of initial funding

Purple Labs, a leading supplier of embedded Linux solutions for the wireless industry, announced today that it secured $14.5 Million USD (10.5 Million €) in an initial round of venture capital funding. This investment comes five months after Sofinnova bought out Purple Labs’ previous Spanish owner. The round was led by Sofinnova Partners (Paris), Earlybird (Munich) and Partners Group (Zurich). The funding will allow Purple Labs to expand its business into new markets and to strengthen the company’s position with existing partners.

Purple Labs was among the first companies in the world to ship a Linux mobile phone fully approved by European network operators. From its beginning as a design center specializing in mobile phone development, Purple Labs has expanded its operation to market and distribute its full, low-cost Linux solution.

“The open operating systems market for mobile is now taking off and Linux will represent a large market share. Purple Labs has not only a fully operational technology allowing the lowest cost handsets to run on Linux, but also a fully proven technology already embedded in millions of phones,” said Roland Manger, an Earlybird Managing Director.

“A fast moving market, a proven technology, a strong team, a fine set of investors: we believe these are the ingredients for a recipe of success,” added Jean Schmitt, a Sofinnova Partners Managing Director.

“Purple Labs has made substantial investments in Linux over the years, convinced of its benefits to design houses, ODM’s and manufacturers looking for a powerful software platform on which to build their future products,” commented Dennis O’Donovan, co-Founder of Purple Labs. “We’re pleased to have respected investors validating our technical choice in Linux. We look forward to rewarding their faith in the Purple Labs team.”

With a long history in Linux software development and in depth knowledge of mobile phone design and customization, Purple Labs is in the position to meet even the more demanding needs of its customers. The company offers a complete solution spanning from hardware reference design to a complete customisable Linux software suite, thereby offering customers a true one-stop-shop solution.

Visto unveils Visto Mail 5.7

Mobile email enabler Visto have just announced the release of version 5.7 of their service. With a focus on greater choice, accessibility and enhanced user experience, this latest offering delivers “anywhere access”  to Internet-based email accounts such as AOL, Gmail, MSN Hotmail and YahooMail! as well as calendar and contact information.

“With the latest version of Visto Mobile, we enable mobile users to access, update and backup their Microsoft and Microsoft Express information online,” said Doug Brackbill, EVP and CMO of Visto. “Now users can switch back and forth between any mobile device they choose, with the added capability of easily transferring calendar appointments and contacts to their current device. This in combination with our unrivalled support for all of the leading Internet-based email providers is why Visto is able to offer mobile access to more email systems on more devices than anyone else in the market.”

Visto Mobile 5.7 also features expanded handset support for Java-based phones traditionally not included in the smartphone category. The Visto Mobile platform is now compatible with more than 130 mobile devices  worldwide, enabling mobile professionals to choose their handset.

The new upgraded Vista Mobile should be available from mobile operators worldwide in Q4 2007.

Going to the Mobile World Congress 2008?

Are you planning on going along to the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona next year? Me? I’m still annoyed at their no-blogger policy. That really wound me right up. Incidentally, I’m going along to speak to some brands thinking of going along next year — they’re looking for my perspective on interacting with bloggers at the event. The first point I’m going to make? Get the GSMA to change it’s no-blogger policy.

Anyway, I got a mail in today from Global Concierge Services explaining that they offer a whole raft of hotel and concierge related services for the event:

If you have not yet book accommodations or venues for the 2008 3GSM World Congress in Barcelona don’t delay.
Global Concierge Services will help you from start to finish with every conceivable option you request. Our office is based in Barcelona and our aim is to make your stay in Barcelona productive and enjoyable.

- Hotel rooms available starting at 200€/night.
- Luxury apartments available starting at 600€ for the week.

If you want to entertain a client or just have a nice dinner in the heart of the city, we can offer you the most exquisite locations for special events, cocktails, dinner….

For more information on how we can help you, don’t hesitate to contact our multi-lingual team.

Please find attached a list of hotels we do have available. We receive new updates to the list weekly, therefore contact us to discuss your specific requirements.

I don’t know them from Adam so I can’t recommend them — however they may well be useful. An apartment for 600 EURO a week sounds good to me. Their site is at www.the-gcs.com.

I haven’t decided if I’m going to bother going.

Blyk arrives, ready to serve the UK’s 16-24 year olds

I originally planned to write up my Blyk launch experience yesterday, however every time I sat down to write, I didn’t feel I’d had enough time to digest and think.

I wanted to take time to talk to lots of 16-24 year olds and other demographics to gauge perspective. In addition, I wanted to document the actual experience, not just the basic facts that we’ve already reported.

So here we go. It was absolutely chucking it down. I was awoken by torrential rain — London in the rain, in September, isn’t always good news. The roads are packed, the puddles are everywhere to the extent that as you’re walking down the streets you sometimes have to turn your umbrella horizontal to prevent the spray from bus running through huge puddles completely soaking you. I had to do this twice as I negotiated the streets to the launch. Not necessarily the nicest day for a launch. Turns out, however, that yesterday was the first day of Fresher’s Week — the perfect marketing opportunity for the country’s 16-24 year olds. Ahh….

The good news was that the launch was taking place in the West End. Poland Street. Relatively easy for most people — me included — to get to. The curveball? The entry was actually a record shop. Different.

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I was wondering if there enough room in the record shop when a polite lady asked if I was ‘here for Blyk’. I nodded and she pointed out the way. A few stairs later I had entered into a big tall white gallery space filled with people. Art on the walls, Blyk logos in evidence, a slideshow ready to rock, food being served by an army of waiters and lots of suits. Good. I was decked out in my usual pinstripes (meetings later on). Sometimes it’s a bit inconvenient turning up to places when everyone is wearing black GAP T-Shirts and sporting Nikes.

Almost immediately, I spotted Geoff Morley, Blyk’s Director of Strategy & Relationships. I snapped a pic.

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I’ve known Geoff quite a while from his work at Mindmatics in particular, so I was delighted when he came striding over to say hi.

“We’re live today,” he said, grinning.

“Right, when’s the launch though?” I asked.

“Now! Today!” Geoff responded — the energy and excitement was shooting out of him.

“I thought you were announcing the launch — you know, sometime in November or something?” I queried.

Geoff smiled, before explaining “No, we’ll be live in about 60 minutes”. Right. I whipped out the E61i and whacked a mail to Alex with the news. I, like a lot of folk, had thought Blyk were somehow going to announce an announcement. Not actually go live. I spotted Rax Lakhani and grabbed his hand. He’d been keeping me updated with all he could publicly do so about Blyk for a while.

Then, as I gazed round the studio looking at all the Blyk branding and market research posters, I took a step back when Giles of Texperts entered my field of vision.

“GILES! How are you doing?” I hadn’t expected to meet anyone from Texperts at the Blyk launch. Then, the hot lady herself, Sarah McVittie joined us. I was about to launch into a ‘guess what, I was texperting-with-a-guy-from-the-Guardian-on-the-Thames-last-week’ story when a chap with a good microphone bellowed for everyone to gather away from the croissants and orange juice — the presentation was about to begin.

I snapped a pic of Sarah and Giles:
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Almost immediately, a lady in front of me started writing furiously into her pad. Ahh. A journalist. You know, an ‘oldie’. A mainstreamer, I thought. (Later on she asked a question and identified herself as a reporter from the Wall Street Journal). For a moment I considered snapping a picture over her shoulder of the notes she was making. Then I thought better. Just as I was surveying the room and the Blyk team were setting up their presentation, I caught sight of… is that… was that… yeah, sure it’s Justin? Justin from BuddyPing / Ninety Ten. Wicked! I wasn’t sure because he was poised with pen in hand. What was he doing at the Blyk launch, I wondered?

Here he is:
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Turns out he’s got some big news. Hugely exciting news. Not publishable at this time though. More, I hope, on that later.

Meanwhile Pekka Ala-Pietilä and Antti Öhrling had got up on stage and the presentation was ready. They were both sporting uber sexy wireless headset microphones so they could have their hands free.

“Shit,” I thought, “Are they going to do a Steve Jobs?” — I was wondering if they were going to talk off-the-cuff. Gosh. Yup. Very impressive indeed. No reading of briefing notes prepared by some PR lackey. As the chaps began their presentation, it became clear to me that they were clearly living Blyk. They were emotionally invested — to the point that they could easily deliver the forthcoming set of slides without a lectern and pages of notes.

Here’s Pekka in full flow:
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I then resolved to snap a shot of each slide.

We start with ‘Open’. Confirmation that they were going live today.

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Then: What is Blyk? The first mobile network for 16-24s funded by advertising. Blyk links young people with brands they like and gives free text and minutes every month.

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It became clear that Blyk is only for 16-24s… I could see a lot of the journalists scribbling madly at this point.

Pekka then announced that Blyk was invitation only.

“You what?” I thought, followed by, “Ahhh, smart, I like it. Make it exclusive.”

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Pekka explained that you could get an invitation by texting ‘FRESH’ to 82595. Two points on this from SMS Text News readers: Dan Lane pointed out that the keyword ‘Fresh’ is also the name of an ultra rubbish MNVO run by Carphone Warehouse (Scroll down to the bottom of this page to see what I think of Fresh). I thought the same when I saw this slide. Possibly confusing for anyone who’s been in a Carphone Warehouse and been hawked a Fresh Mobile sim recently. Reader njar pointed out that the Blyk shortcode, 82595, stands for 8BLYK. Very sexy indeed.

Pekka went on to discuss that Blyk will ask qualifying ‘members’ (not subscribers or users) to describe their interests online.

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Then you get sent out a sim pack which looks rather smart:

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Then they send out the Blyk settings (wap, internet, voicemail and so on) to your handset:

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It’s at this point that it becomes clear that Blyk isn’t going to be handset-led. Instead, members will be encouraged to use their existing handsets (that will need to be unlocked). The only provisio is that they must be MMS capable. Why? Because Blyk’s first version of advertising/interaction is heavily based around that medium (coupled with text messaging). (Blyk will actually sell you a handset, much the same as the likes of Virgin Mobile will do)

At this point I walked around the gallery and almost fell over Stuart Dredge from Tech Digest.

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He was busy liveblogging away. I wondered if he was using a 3UK GSM modem so I pointed my camera down and snapped a shot.

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Nope, it’s a Vodafone one. And he had a signal even in the depths of the building. Very cool.

The slide changed.

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No contract, no phone bill, for up to 4.5 million young people in the UK.

“How are they going to control that?”, I thought, “What happens if everyone wants to be on Blyk?”

Quite simply, you’re not getting it. If you’re not between the ages of 16 and 24, you’re name’s not on the list. You can’t come in. I like it. Obviously I’d like to be able to be part of the game, but I’m quite far beyond 24 now. Interesting strategy.

And they’re not playing about. The next slide demonstrates that Blyk didn’t just turn up in the UK, grab hold of a “So you’d like to do an MVNO with Orange” standard contract and sign on the bottom line. No, Sir…

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The entire infrastructure is theirs, end to end, with the exception of the mobile connectivity which is provided by Orange. This enables Blyk to take substantial control over the end-user experience, from internet browsing to messaging delivery.

The next slide pointed this out:

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“End to end — complete control of our network, user experience and ad products.”

Then Antti took the spotlight to explain just how Blyk intends delivering advertising value.

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“Messaging is the simple dominant behaviour for 16-24 year olds. This will be the dominant design for mobile advertising.”

Cool. I think most of the audience were nodding — we’ve heard this kind of thing before from everyone from exciting mobile industry executives to mobile advertising agencies trying to get folk to spend money on shortcodes and text messages. What’s new, Antti?

Lots, actually. Antti began to get more and more animated.

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Wherever you see the ^ sign (incidentally, the same sign used in the Blyk logo), that will signify that you, as a Blyk member, can interact with a brand. For free. No cost, whether you’re sending a text to them or browsing some mobile pages. So totally ‘free’ interaction with a brand. You’re not paying standard network rates for every message, nor are you spunking money to peruse advertiser messages on the mobile web. That’s got a certain appeal.

But it’s useless if the message — the communication from the advertiser — is useless. And let’s face it, we’ve all seen some absolute rubbish presented by a lot of big brands trying to experiment with mobile. I think the audience was liking Antti’s message but still keeping a skeptical viewpoint just in case …

“Let’s look at some example interactions,” says Antti.

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The first example is interaction between a member and L’Oreal. These ain’t rubbish brands, at all. L’Oreal? My eyebrows were raising. They do mean business.

Antti showed this slide:

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The member is asked to chose which celebrity they reckon they’re most like:

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The audience was asked to believe that a 16-24 year old, upon receiving this kind of communication, would leap to respond. There was still a little bit of inherent skepticism in the weathered audience, I reckoned. But I was starting to believe. Put yourself in the mind of a media savvy 16-24 year old and think just how they’d respond to this kind of challenge. And it’s free to reply. If you’re sat stuck on the bus on the way to Uni, you’d definitely play along. To do so, the instructions are there in the message. ” ^1/2/3/4/5 ” means you simply reply with a number corresponding to the celebrity.

Antti was in full flow, describing this process — backed up by 18 months of in-depth research.

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Whack back your response:
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And uber-quickly, the member is sent this reply back:

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The text reads, “Then you’d suit Eva’s shade of Color Riche Star Secrets, Caramel”, complete with a product picture and bigger Celeb shot.

Ok, I like it.

I get that. And boy it does look good — full screen MMS. I need to look into that more.

Antti moved quickly on to another interaction example. You’ve previously described that you’re a student — so you’re sent a text question from StepStone Recruitment asking if you need a job.

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If you’re up for it, you reply with what you’re looking for.

Blyk responds, asking if you’re up for part time or full time…

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You’re then invited to subscribe to StepStone’s text alerts.

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The concept behind this being that it’s naturally a lot better to engage in dialogue with the member rather than just whack a blanket text to every Blyk member. How effective will this be? Well, that remains to be seen.

Antti then went on to highlight message tagging:

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… You actually get an advert in messages sent to you from your friends. In this example, your friend is texting you to say that they’re going to be 15 minutes late. The rest of the message contains a call-to-action for STA Travel’s hot deals.

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I’m wondering just how effective this will be. I don’t know. I’d like to think it will be rather cool. It could potentially be quite annoying. But on the other hand, provided it’s semi customised (i.e. I have checked the box saying I’m up for travel deals), it may well be extremely welcome. Plus it’s free to browse the link sent in the message.

Antti finished by shocking us with the fact that Blyk has over 40 brands on board for launch.

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“Forty-Five,” called Jonathan, their head of advertising. Shit. That’s good.

Then Antti began flicking through the brands. We’re not talking your local shop. Big multinationals flashed up on screen. Journalist pens flew across their notebooks recording the brand names.

I got hold of the final slide with all 40 odd brands:

blyk advertisers

Acuvue, Adidas, AQA, Boots, Borders, BSM, Buena/Disney… Coke, Colgate, NatWest, Mastercard, Sky, McDonalds,……….

Huge. Huge, huge brands delivering a stunning amount of credibility. But why wouldn’t they want to be involved? Blyk’s audience is exactly the one they’d like to reach.

AQA popped up on screen and I did a double-take. “Hold on,” I thought, “Didn’t I just see Sarah from Texperts?” Seems like AQA got there first.

Quickly, it was on to questions from the audience.

How much for data browsing? £0.99/meg. Hmm. Quite expensive. But then again this is Orange, we’re talking about, not exactly famed for their healthy data price plans.

How many free minutes do members get?
43 minutes? You what? 43? Not 42? Not 44? Why exactly 43 minutes? Strange.

And free text messages?
217. 7.2 texts every 30 days. Again, slightly strange. Pekka wasn’t having a laugh though, explaining that they’ve gone to market with this offering supported by their mountains of research.

Me? Well, I do think it’s a wee bit silly picking such apparently arbitrary numbers. It certainly sets Blyk out against the existing MNO/MNVO offerings.

If you go over the free usage, you’ll be billed 10p per text and 15p per minute to any number in the UK (irrespective of whether it’s mobile or landline). Simple and clear pricing.

What happens if someone over the age of 25 applies for Blyk? No deal. Pekka explains that they’ve implemented quite a lot of unified information databases to ensure that only those aged 16-24 can sign up. If you’re aged 24 right now, that’s fine, you can join the club and stay a member when you become 25. But if you’re 25 now, hard luck. I do like the exclusivity this brings.

I do also like the tagline, “Blyk is the new mobile network for 16-24 year olds” — I think that will appeal to the target audience.

The presentation came to an end and I surveyed the room. I think it’s a hard audience — seasoned tech hacks who are accustomed to going along to launches and being romanced with free devices and samples — who aren’t going to be entirely impressed at being told they’re too old to use Blyk. Heh. I kept an open mind as I wandered back to pack my camera away.

Geoff came bounding over, “Here, can I show you that Miss Selfridge demo?” he asked. I smiled and took out my camera. Geoff was bursting with excitement as he flipped open his E65, “Just wait ’til you see this.”

He proceeded to show me a sample interaction aimed, I imagine, at a young fashion-conscious girl. In the example, the member is sent a full-screen MMS, asking them to guess the cost of a jacket/dress:

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Send off your (free) answer and the system replies right-away with a follow-up question. No joke, it was lightning fast in the demo Geoff showed me.

Geoff guessed the price correctly and got this back:

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Spot on! Guess the price of the next two items from Miss Selfridge.com to earn yourself a fantastic discount.

Oh interesting, very interesting.

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Geoff was on a roll, correctly guessing the price of the bag:

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“You’re on a roll,” the text reply said.

The final question arrived:

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Geoff got that right and then was sent this text by reply:

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Congratulations! You have a great eye for fashion and for a bargain too. Enter this code at the checkout at Miss Selfridge.com to get your 20% discount.

Now that might not seem that big a deal for a mobile industry analyst on a hundred grand a year. But for your average 17 year old, this would be a big, big deal. I know. I checked.

I walked straight out of the Blyk launch and started making some calls to my younger brother’s friends. They’re exactly the Blyk target. They have to pay their own phone bills, they have to buy their own handsets. How do they react to this kind of offering?

Well, anecdotally, the response was phenomenal. I spoke to a load of 17-19 year olds who I reckoned fit the Blyk profile almost exactly. Each one of them has gone off to sign up after my description.

Let’s, then, take a step back. Is Blyk poised for success?

Yes. I think so. I’d like to think so. I’ve spoken to a lot of people across the industry since yesterday to garner opinion. A lot are a little suspect. Some are downright cynical. Many were reeling off ’showstopper’ issues such as lack of access to unlocked handsets, demographic apathy and so on. ‘It’ll fizzle out in a few months’ someone said, whilst another reckoned it was a huge waste of money.

I think Blyk have a lot of challenges. They’ve got a super, super team of people though and I think they deserve the benefit of the doubt from a highly skeptical and slightly wearied UK industry — and they also deserve a fair wind.

The Blyk chaps I spoke to yesterday were overflowing with energy, commitment and pure excitement (Something I’ve only ever witnessed now and again from the likes of 3UK).

I think their advertising funded model could work — can work. I think the market is ready for this kind of service and I think that there’s a large segment of the student audience in this country that will snap it up.

If you’re sat there with your arms folded not entirely convinced then let’s you and I agree to wait and see. Let’s track Blyk and their performance over the next six months and see how they get on.

Every success to the team!

Orange get French iPhone deal

Link: Apple turns to Orange in France | The Register

In another of those ‘oh what a surprise’ announcements, it’s been revealed that Orange will be marketing the iPhone in France.

The announcement was made by France Telecom (Orange’s parent company) Chief Exec Didier Lombard during a conference in Hanoi.

No details on pricing as yet, and the Orange France website is surprisingly lacking in information - a quick search revealed “0 réponse pour iphone”. It won’t be a surprise if the price is the same as the T-Mobile/Germany deal of €399.

What’s curious is all the announcements so far have involved the current or former wireless divisions of incumbent operators - France Telecom (Orange), Deutsche Telekom (T-Mobile), BT (O2) and AT&T (er, AT&T). Working on this theory, should we expect Vodafone (ex Telecom Eireann) for Ireland, O2 (Telefonica) for Spain and KPN in the Netherlands? Or is it just coincidental?

Can you help with this video calling project?

Had a note in from an SMS Text News reader, who posed an interesting question.

i have a friend who is going to be in tokyo in the next couple of months… she wants to be able to stream back a couple of hours of LIVE video of her walking around tokyo — basically doing live newscasting from the streets. this needs to be reliable(ish) and cheap… so really we need a solution that becomes internet-delivered as close to source as possible to save on any network charges…. (and needs to be accessible this end via a pc or mac)… obviously a laptop plus 3g card and/or access to a wireless network, plus a videocam would work, but we’re hoping for something more lightweight… an ip-enabled video mobile with flat rate 3g data would be perfect… but being japan there are almost certainly problems with carriers, proprietary data formats, internet gateways/proxies etc… know anyone who knows japanese mobile data inside out and wouldn’t mind a call? there’s really no money in this, but it would be great if we can pull it off!

I suggested 3G to 3G video calling, with something like an N95 with AV out at the other end to turn it into something useful. However, that opens a can of worms of whether it’s actually possible to make a 3G video call from Japan back to the UK.

As the reader says, there’s no real budget in it - but it’s hopefully interesting enough to spark someones interest :)

Flower Fairy flys today…

flowers

Today the flower fairy is on her way to Amy at Vodafone. Amy insisted she didn’t want flowers for simply doing her job, but we thought she deserved them anyway. As well, we’ll be making a small donation in her honour.

Great job Amy!

Blyk rides into town

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Well.

Cat, pigeons.

Bull, china shop.

It’s going to be an interesting two quarters for the mobile operators in the United Kingdom after the arrival of ad-funded MVNO, Blyk.

I went to the launch this morning and I’m currently working on the overview of the experience. I’ve got quite a lot to say and to report — I’m just putting it into meaningful order and uploading the 1.3 gig of photos I took!

Stay tuned for updates.

Trutap takes another $6.5m in funding

trutap

It’s all go at Trutap, big time. The Tudor Group (plus some others) have just whacked over $6.5m in a series A funding round, not even a week after Trutap’s starring role in the TechCrunch40.

In total, Trutap has received $13m worth of funding — the extra cash is to be used for continued service development, strengthening of the team and marketing activities.

I haven’t yet checked out Trutap but I’m looking forward to doing so.

The Tudor Group I’m writing about, by the way, is NOT the historical interpretation society concentrating on the later Tudor period (1560-1603). That’s what I got when I typed in Tudorgroup.co.uk (nevertheless very interesting). Woops. It’s Tudorfunds.com you want.

ICSTIS fine Opera £250k over GMTV fiasco

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Link: ICSTIS Consumer - Adjudications

Remember the GMTV fiasco? The TV broadcasters telecoms provider Opera has just been fined £250k by regulator ICSTIS and been issued a ban for running premium services for 12 months (rather sadly suspended for 12 months on condition they ‘clean up their act’) for their part in the scandal

Having had a brief scan of the rather wordy adjudication, a few things are interesting. ICSTIS, given the choice, would have imposed a fine a lot higher than £250k. However, they’re stuck with that cap - and can’t go above it. As well as the fine, and having been well and truely slapped hard by ICSTIS, they’ve been told they can’t run *any* premium services for twelve months - but get this: it’s been suspended on the condition that they play fair from now on, have an audit of procedures, etc etc.

If ICSTIS are trying to persuade consumers to regain confidence in premium telephony and SMS, they should have banished GMTV and Opera from the face of the planet. This is not your ordinary run-of-the-mill minor ‘cock-up’ - it’s a multi-million pound fraud that both parties knew damn well about. Even if they refund everyone concerned (which is highly unlikely, as let’s face it - most consumers aren’t going to bother trying to get their cash back), the damage has been done.

Even now, ICSTIS are concerned about Opera and their future conduct. It remains to see whether they’ll be able to play fair in the future - but for now, in my opinion, they’ve got off lightly.

ROK Talk worked perfectly with 11 attendees

There is something rather exciting to behold when you hit ‘Start Conference –> Now’ in the ROK Talk application…

Especially when you’re calling 11 people simultaneously.

Thrice especially, when you’re in the same room as the other 11 people.

Heh. Everyone’s phone rings at the *same* time, I love it!

RING ring RING ringring RING ring HELLO ring HELLO? ringring RING!

I demonstrated the service to a load of people at the weekend and I think they were all suitably impressed. ROK Talk are releasing more accounts so if you haven’t yet tried it out (or applied for a beta test) do so at roktalk.com.

Daily Mail readers h8 txt msgs

Link: I h8 txt msgs: How texting is wrecking our language | the Daily Mail

It must be a slow news day over at the Daily Mail. With no apparent stories of immigrants stealing our jobs, paedophiles ravaging our kids or any other general threat to the pretend ‘la la land’ middle England readership that the Daily Mail purports to represent, they’ve decided to lay into text messaging.

It is the relentless onward march of the texters, the SMS (Short Message Service) vandals who are doing to our language what Genghis Khan did to his neighbours eight hundred years ago.

They are destroying it: pillaging our punctuation; savaging our sentences; raping our vocabulary. And they must be stopped.

Right.. I’d imagine Genghis Khan would be a little peeved to have his plundering and pillaging antics compared to someone asking if you fancy a pint later (or should that be l8r?)

PS: I expect someone will buy me this t-shirt after my little rant :)

dotMobi’s having an auction

Ever fancied getting your hands on a really cool .mobi domain name, but found it was taken? You might be in luck, as some of the 5,500 commonly used words the registry ‘reserved’ before offering registrations to the public are to be auctioned off  via Sedo starting this Wednesday.

“The mobile web is bigger than the PC-based, wired web with more than 1.6 billion Internet-enabled consumers walking around the world. Brands need an easy-to-remember way to attract consumers on the go. dotMobi has one of the highest sought-after list of in-demand domain names in the world,” said David Ryder, dotMobi’s VP of Marketing and Sales. “dotMobi is selling these highly- sought after names through Sedo because they are one of the main places on the Internet where brand managers search for domain names.”
Tim Schumacher, CEO of Sedo, said, “dotMobi’s premium names are specifically designed for people wanting to reach a mobile audience. Sedo’s buyers have been lining up for more than a year now to get a chance to buy these dotMobi names. We are excited that dotMobi will use us as their first online auction.

Full information, including the list of auction names, is located on the dotMobi web site at http://premiumauction.mobi/.

Breaking news: Blyk goes live today

Ewan is at the launch of ad-funded mobile network Blyk as we speak - and they’ve just announced they’re going live today!

Here’s what we know so far. First, you have to be aged between 16 and 24 and live in the UK. They’re offering 217 texts and 43 cross-network minutes free each month. Once you go past that, it’s 10p a text and 15p a minute. Pre-pay of course. In return for these freebies Blyk will send you up to six ads per day sent to your mobile via MMS.

Update: Here’s the full price list, gleaned from their website:

Calls: £0.15/min any UK mobile network or landline.
Calls to Blyk voicemail: £0.15/min
Calls to 0845 numbers: £0.15/min
Calls to 0870 numbers: £0.25/min
Calls to premium rate (070 and 09) numbers: £0.20-£2.00/min
Calls to foreign networks: see international price list
Text messages: £0.10 each to UK mobile network.
Texts to premium rate shortcodes: £0.10 each + price of the service
Texts to foreign networks: £0.10
Picture messages (MMS): £0.20 each
Picture messages (MMS) to foreign networks: Not supported
Browsing the Blyk mobile portal: Free
Browsing other web content: £1.00/MBThere’s no roaming, which is a bit of a pain - but hopefully this will change.

That’s about it so far, more information when Ewan gets back from the launch event.

Mobile cable woes could be over soon

Link: PC Pro: News: All mobiles to share same charger standard

The Open Mobile Terminal Platform (OMTP), a forum of leading phone operators and manufacturers including heavyweights Nokia, Samsung, Motorola, Sony Ericsson and LG, has agreed to make micro-USB the connector standard on all its future hardware.

“With UK consumers changing their handset on average twice a year there are hundreds millions of chargers and data cables in circulation,” says a statement from the group.

On the average day I carry around two data cables and two chargers, plus a Nokia power adaptor (you know the one that adapts the bigger Nokia plug to the smaller one). It’s a total pain in the arse - and would be even worse if I had any non-Nokia devices about my person.

How long will it be before we start seeing the same connector for power and data on all our mobiles? Given the average life of a device, I reckon it’s going to be a few years before one charger and one data cable rules them all.

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