Tracking Stuff in Mobile

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

Archive for the ‘Feature’ Category

Text a Mars Bar!

Happy Valentines day one and all. Instead of sending a virtual gift to your mates on Facebook, how about sending a Mars Bar? The Light Agency, working on behalf of Mars Snackfoods, have come up with a Facebook application that lets you do just that.

Here’s how, according to the news release I got this morning, the process works:

Celebrate, an innovative application that allows Facebook users in the UK to send friends real gifts launches on the 14th of February. Celebrate is the first application of its kind to be built on Facebook Platform that will allow the website’s UK users to choose from a range of Mars confectionery gifts from the Celebrate Sweet Shop.

Facebook currently allows users to send friends virtual gifts but the Celebrate application takes this premise further by allowing them to send a real and tangible gift through Celebrate.

The new service is quick and easy to use. Users simply select the gift they wish to send, select a friend, add a message and pay for the gift via tokens on their PayPal account. A message is sent to the gift recipient and they are then requested to provide their mobile number to receive a unique Celebrate Voucher ID and details of the gifts via SMS text to their mobile. To collect the gift, they simply visit a participating PayPoint retailer/stockist and show the Celebrate Voucher ID where it is scanned at the terminal.

Details are sketchy… I have no photos or even a Facebook Application link for you — and the above text reads to me as though the recipient is sent some sort of barcode to their phone. If that’s the case, then this is quite an innovative use of the technology. I’ll try and find out more soon.

UPDATE: Here are some screenshots:

Real chocolates on Valentine's Day from Facebook

Real chocolates on Valentine's Day from Facebook

Real chocolates on Valentine's Day from Facebook

Readius: The standout device of Mobile World Congress?

Image

While I’ve been nodding gently and with reasonable excitement at the likes of Samsung’s new handsets, Nokia’s announcements (the N96 does look gorgeous) and Yahoo’s oneConnect strategy.

But nothing new or totally unexpected has really caught my attention. At least that was the case until I came across Readius from Polymer Vision. I didn’t get an announcement, a release or anything about this! In fact I almost missed it!

Versions of the device have been around since last year’s 3GSM — however the current version looks very much ready for production. Here’s hoping. I’ve no word on whether you can buy one yet.
The concept is pure genius.

Image

Readius is a small device, 115 x 57 x 21 millimeters (when closed). It’s principally an e-Reader, although it also functions has a tri-band handset allowing worldwide calls — and of course, ‘high speed instant updates’ from ‘personally selected news sources’ (like SMS Text News!).

You can read for up to 30 hours on one battery charge (no word on call time). The fold-out screen has ‘twice the surface area of the current largest phone display’ (the iPhone is 3.5″ in case you were wondering). Bluetooth 2.0, 256mb of internal storage (up to 8GB with MicroSD), and it’ll function as a mass storage device when connected to your PC.

I’m sold. I really like the concept.

A few sites around the world are reporting that the Readius should be available to the public mid-2008. There is, alas, a dearth of current information. I’ll try and find some more soon.

Yahoo’s socially integrated messaging service, oneConnect

Image

Yahoo really are pushing forward with their mobile efforts — it really is gratifying to see.

Let’s hear from Marco Boerries, Exec VP of Yahoo’s Connected Life:

“Last year we set out to reinvent mobile search with Yahoo! oneSearch, and today with 29 operator partnerships around the world covering more than 600 million subscribers, we believe we have certainly succeeded,” said Marco. “Now, we intend to reinvent mobile communications through Yahoo! oneConnect, a revolutionary new mobile communications service that will combine integrated mobile messaging with a socially-connected address book.”

The architecutre is open — plus it’s aiming to offer an entirely connected experience, whether your friends are on Yahoo, MSN or beyond. I think this ‘new level of convenience’ could be a real catalyst to converting hte normobs (”normal mobile users”) to use their handsets for more than just calling and texting. Provided, that is, they’re not being stiffed for unreasonable data rates.

Some of the key features of oneConnect include:

– Socially-connected address book - Provide users the capability to integrate activity from popular social networks, professional networks, and communities into their address book, keeping it always in sync. Consumers will be able to view status updates, photo uploads, and the recent activity (”pulse”) of contacts across all their networks.

Interesting, interesting. This could be rather smart, particularly given Yahoo’s ownership of the likes of Flickr.

– Integrated mobile messaging - Offer seamless integration of IM and SMS, including threaded conversations. Any messaging service will be able to use Yahoo! oneConnect’s open APIs to plug into the application’s messaging feature - enabling consumers to access a wide range of popular services, such as Yahoo! Messenger, Google(R) Talk, AOL(R) Instant Messenger and MSN(TM) Messenger.

I wonder how the application will function. I’ll definitely check this one out.

– Status - Give consumers the capability to view their contacts by their most recent status updates on popular social networks, as well as update their own status on their favorite social networks - in one easy step - and automatically broadcast it to their friends.

If they pull together Twitter, Jaiku, Facebook, it could be rather compelling.

– Pulse - Provide consumers the functionality to see a dynamic overview of what friends are up to, including recent photos, their status, profile updates, and recommendations based on their most recent actions on popular social networks.

– Favorites - Keep the people consumers interact with most at their fingertips. Users will be able to set up messaging shortcuts to make reaching out as quick as possible.

– Social contact card - Allow users to aggregate the most relevant information on any given contact, including archives of past communications, detailed pulse history, and one-click ways to initiate communication.

I like Yahoo’s strategy of aiming to be the spoke in the middle of the myriad of services out there.

– Innovative location-sensing technology - Provide new ways to locate, chat with, and exchange contact information with nearby Yahoo! oneConnect users. Proximity alerts will notify consumers when a contact enters their vicinity.

Proximity alerts? Coooooool! Can’t wait to see that working…

– An open communications platform - Give users the functionality to communicate via multiple communications tools - such as IM, SMS, and social networks. Widgets will provide users the capability to access their email across major email providers, such as Yahoo! Mail, MSN Hotmail(R), Gmail(R), and AOL(R) Mail. Additionally, Yahoo! is in discussions with DataViz(R), a company that allows mobile users to access their corporate Microsoft Exchange(TM) email accounts and Microsoft Office(TM), documents, to work together on widget versions of its industry-acclaimed RoadSynch(R) and Documents To Go(R) applications.

Interesting, interesting. We just did a group test between Dataviz’s RoadSync and Nokia’s Exchange service. I know contributor Ben Smith is a huge fan of RoadSync so this news could be good.

It really does look like Yahoo have sat down and worked out a key selection of features that will appeal to the mobile majority. Let’s see how it actually functions, then… we’ll hopefully have more news from them soon.

Mobile World Congress: Look Ahead

mwc_crystal_ballDespite the organisers’ less than enlightened attitude to bloggers at last year’s 3GSM, absolutely everyone who’s ever put keyboard to Wordpress is off to the newly re-christened GSMA Mobile World Congress this year. Except me. I have to stay here and work.

Humph.

Still, the mobile news will be pouring out of Barcelona like un-released Nokia product specs from a German website so here’s a quick round up of a few of the major themes and products that we’re likely to see this year.

The handset manufacturers:

Nokia will probably only announce a couple of handsets as they have other S60-fish to fry this year, so we may see an N96 (the next increment of the N95 line) and possibly the E71 (an E61i successor). An N78 (replacing the N73) and an E66 (an E65 replacement) have also been rumoured.

SonyEricsson have hit the ground running and already announced a pile of handsets that develop ther range with G-series ‘touch-screen organisers’, splash resistant and GPS-enabled C-series camera-phones, W-series high-capacity Walkman-phones, Z-series web and e-mail phones. Much of the coverage, though, will go on the attention-grabbing X1 - a new Windows Mobile-based touch screen and QWERTY keyboard web / multimedia device that is going to make you very happy if you got the phrase ‘QWERTY iPhone’ in the MWC buzzword-bingo draw. For the first live pictures see here.

Motorola have hinted at mobile TV-related launches, but little else.

LG has already launched a high-spec Symbian QWERTY device, possibly a Nokia E90 competitor, but so far have forgotten to release any pictures of it.

Samsung are bringing an additional mini-touch screen for navigation to their existing small form-factor slider handset range and may also be launching a premium, high-spec, Symbian-based N95 competitor.

Modu will also unveil their tediously over-trailed mini-phone thing with ‘jackets’ for differing functions. We generally try to keep the tone fairly positive round here, but can I be the first to say that if this is innovation the world’s gone mad. An easy way to access you phone’s data contents or access mobile data? Bluetooth. Welcome to the 1990’s.

New technologies and first looks:

S60 will give more details on its ‘Touch’ user interface for Symbian phones with a Nokia demo and more details on support for a wider range of sensors for movement and orientation.

Android, Google’s entry into the mobile OS world, will be demonstrated for the first time publicly on a prototype device from ARM. We may also hear more details on possible enterprise uses from the likes of Cisco.

Femtocells will be everywhere with Motorola and Netgear demoing 3G femtocells, demonstrations of up to 3.5G cells connected only to ADSL and products intended for consumer residential use. A GSM ‘in a box’ solution that takes 5 minutes to deploy will also be demoed.

Full web browsing on mobile devices will als obe a hot-topic with Opera making their new 9.5 release mobile browser available for the first time. Nokia too will be updating the native S60 browser, promising a more ‘full web’ experience.

Trends:

Microsoft could well be everywhere as they make eyes at Nokia, launch handsets with SonyEricsson and the continuing Yahoo saga unfolds after what seems the now-inevitable rejection by Yahoo’s board of their offer.

Britain will be well reprented with 150 firms attending - the largest number from one country.

Location services will stay in the limelight with richer mapping / location guides and ‘pedestrian modes’ being common themes. The Nokia Maps beta release features updates in both these areas and Navteq has announced location guides and information for pedestrians (including public transport). Improved location sensing via A-GPS (or something better) will also feature as will WiFi-based location sensing and location-based social networking.

Sagrada_FamiliaFor more reading take a look at the predictions made by the Head of O2’s R&D lab to Mobile Today. And finally… if you damage your phones a lot take a look at a tough phone with a serious guarantee.

Oh yeah and Whatley’s there with SpinVox so watch out for ‘news from the front’ from him if he can drag himself away from the free tapas… Humph.

Left: The famous Gaudi-designed Sagrada Familia church in Barcelona - under construction for almost 150 years, but it will be nice when it’s finished…

The USA Series: Signing up for a mobile contract in the States

I’ve received a terrific amount of feedback from readers on the first post (”The USA Series: Prelude to buying a mobile phone in America“). The vast majority of comments have been shock (from the European readers), frowning acknowledgement (from the Americans) and quite a few flames (from the know-nothings who refuse to recognise or exist in reality).

Do get a good cup of coffee for I am about to dispense with my experiences. Before I do, for the ultra outraged flamers who believe I’m denigrating the good ‘ol United States with my posts (I’ve had a few hothead communications since the first post), let me answer their accusations with an illustration:

George Bush and Tony Blair are at a White House press briefing. It’s being beamed round the world in real time. I’m sat watching on CNN. Blair steps up to the podium and takes multiple questions from the press. A few curveballs but he manages well. It’s te first time he and Bush have met so the last question (if memory serves, I’m paraphrasing in these examples) is “What common ground have you and the President discovered?”

Blair, ever the Statesman, opines about the ’special relationship’, the commonality of spirit, the shared values of freedom, decency and peace — and so on. A good, off-the-cuff reposte. Whatever your politics, Blair can definitely hack it on the world stage, no problem.

The journalist poses the same question to President Bush (”Have you and Mr Blair found common ground?”). Bush does a blank stare for a few moments, smiles whilst thinking hard. “Well,” begins Bush, “I found out we use the same toothpaste.”

Right.

My point? Your Government is doing fine trashing the American reputation. Doesn’t need any help from me.

Me? I’m a big fan of America. Particularly the West Coast — because it’s a lot warmer. So, to be clear before anyone else thinks I’m trashing America: It’s the lack of innovation I’m trashing. The general spirit of the industry. The backward nature of the medium from the consumer viewpoint. Not the country, not the country’s values, not the flag.

Now, a step back about a month. It’s December and I’ve just arrived in America.

- - -

Here I am then, twenty-four hours in San Francisco. I’ve moved, temporarily, to the city by the Bay, to explore the mobile industry and meet with some innovative mobile companies. I’ll be here for just under three months. The first thing I did yesterday was go and get a car. You can’t do anything, really, in America, without a car. It’s possible to walk to places here in the city, but if you’re planning on going anywhere, seeing the sights, doing some mobile-company-drop-ins, then you really need a car.

A visit to Enterprise and we were sorted.

The next problem? No mobile phone. This particular issue had been eating me up since I arrived at the airport. Yes, I had my UK T-Mobile, my 3UK handset and my trusty MAXroam SIM (never leave home without your MAXroam), but I wanted to experience the whole ‘call me on 415…’ thing.

For decades I’ve been watching American movies and television shows featuring 10 digit mobile numbers (”212-555-5555″). In the past few years I’ve been trying to test out American-made mobile applications but have often had to apologise to eager entrepreneurs, explain that my UK mobile number is 11 digits (or more with the international code) — and generally, the sign-up boxes for many American mobile applications only allow ten digits. I’ve thus been reduced to peering in the window.

I wanted to see what it was like. I didn’t want to just look and empathise. I wanted to live it. Pay as you go would be fine of course. But I really wanted a contract. I wanted the full experience of buying a contract handset in America.

So after getting the car, the first thing I did was drive to the Stonestown Mall nearby. I’d done some research and found that it contained a Sprint store. Now there’s quite a few mobile phone shops around San Francisco but none that I was comfortable driving to, yet. Swapping to driving on the right is unnerving enough without having to arse about with a reverse park on a busy road, just so I could visit a phone shop.

Arriving at the mall, I made a bee-line to the Sprint store. I’d heard one or two comments about Sprint in the past but, crucially, none that I could remember.

The store looked bright, it was clean, there were quite a few special offers in the window. I looked in. It was empty. Just the sales chap typing away on his computer. There were quite a few handsets on the walls and a few laptops setup showcasing services.

“Fine,” I thought, “Let’s pop in.”

I walked in and had a look around. The chap looked up and said hi. Friendly.

As for decor, well, think ‘upscale hardware shop’ in yellow. We’re not talking Vodafone or 3UK flashy graphics, pumping sounds, 50 inch plasmas or the like. A quiet, sedate, bordering-on-functional store. Lots of yellow (that’s Sprint’s colour).

“Can I help you?” asked a chap.
“Er,” I thought, “Yes, I’m looking for a phone.”

We had a conversation. The chap was polite, attentive and friendly. I explained I was from the UK and I needed a phone to use for three months.

He pointed me toward their Boost Mobile stand. For some reason I went with the flow and thought, ‘Yeah, Pay as You Go. Fine for me. Let’s try it out.’

“These are our pay as you go services,” he explained. He detailed the prices of the handsets. I picked one for $50 and asked him what the call charges would be to the United Kingdom.

“Let me just check,” he said. He went into the back of the store and brought out a new shiny Apple MacBook Pro and logged on to Boostmobile.com.

As he navigated around the website I caught sight of the Sprint PCI Express data card sticking out of the laptop.

“Are you on WiFi?” I asked him.
“No, Sprint,” he replied, finding the right page for Boost’s international mobile charges.

He was navigating around the web faster than I’d ever seen. I was supremely impressed. The data speed was just phenomenal, continuous, reliable. I was immediately taken with the card. Even more so when the chap pointed out the fantastic tariffs.

But focus. Focus MacLeod!

“It’s 25 cents a minute,” the chap explained.

“Right, give me two of those Boost mobiles,” I declared, my mind still lingering on the data card. [One for me, one for the other half]

I forgot the data card as the chap demonstrated push-to-talk working with Boost. Really, really smart. I’d never actually seen it ‘live’ in the flesh before. We don’t have anything like that in the UK unfortunately.

I walked out the store with two Boost Mobiles (or ‘mobils’ — that’s how Americans seem to pronounce ‘mobile’) and felt good. I’d initially thought about a contract but, screw it, Pay As You Go is fine, right?

Yes.

Or no.

I spent a day winding up my other half by making push-to-talk ‘calls’ every five minutes. It’s an acutely annoying medium if you get a push-to-talk message whilst browsing in a very quite upscale boutique shop.

Quickly I exhausted my credit. I logged on to Boostmobile.com and looked for the credit card recharge option.

Arse. You can’t do it online. You have to phone them. How stupid. I phoned up customer services to setup my credit card. We got into all sorts of trouble together unfortunately. First off, the line was really bad. Think VOIP running over a 9k/sec connection whilst someone is downloading a 100 meg file. Boost itself was fine when calling other numbers. But calling customer services was painful. Secondly, they didn’t quite get the international ‘thing’, repeatedly asking me what State my credit card was registered to and getting severely annoyed when I refused to give them a numerical zip code (”It’s a BRITISH POST CODE”).

Eventually I gave up. I went to Walgreens — a ‘pharmacy’ similar to Boots in the UK — and purchased a $20 credit for both phones. Logged on to Boostmobile.com and … well, my credit upload worked. Hers didn’t. The card had already been used. I couldn’t be arsed phoning customer services. I bought another card only to find that we couldn’t login to Boostmobile.com because she’d forgotten her PIN number and customer services were… well, you’ve guessed it, yes? They were distinctly unhelpful.

Screw this.

I need to transact business internationally. Although I’ve got my MAXroam, I would like an ‘American’ handset — and by this time after messing around with Boost — I decided it was time I got a contract handset, whatever the cost.

I’m going to be here for three months. Might as well.

I went mobile phone shopping. And that’s where the nightmare began.

I’d had good service at Sprint but I thought I’d check out the other mobile operator stores and see what they were offering. Obviously my demands were quite different from your usual American. This became immediately clear when I walked into the Verizon shop on Market Street, one of San Francisco’s main thoroughfares.

I didn’t bother looking at the handsets, instead I headed straight up to the sales desk. I’d spent the whole night previously working out the best possible introductory pitch to the shop salesmen to make things as easy as possible. Here’s the pitched I decided upon:

“I’d like a contract. I’m here for three months and I’ll be returning to America regularly. I am a British subject therefore I don’t have a social security number and thus cannot pass a credit check. I need to call the United Kingdom regularly so I’d like an add-on that lets me call the UK cheaply. Money, within reason, isn’t an issue.”

I thought that initial pitch would tell the salesman everything he needed to know. I also reckoned that it would be a good comparison to put that to each mobile operator salesman and see what they come up with.

My experience of Verizon was severely limited. I knew it’s linked to the Vodafone group, that it’s CDMA and that it’s supposedly ‘Americas Most Reliable Network’. There are billboards all over the place announcing this to all and sundry.

So after delivering my pitch, I stood back slightly and waited.

I was surprised. Very surprised.

“Well er, your best bet is to get a calling card sir.”

“Sorry? No, I want a contract. Could you tell me about your international rates to the UK?”

I was staggered by the chap’s immediate animosity. I was prepared for an engagement — a discussion — a bit of ‘discovery’ and, frankly, I was expecting him to get out a brochure and start walking me through price plan options.

Instead, he folded his arms and repeated, “Just go and get a calling card in Walgreens across the road.”

“Listen, it’s ok, I’ve got money,” I explained, “Can’t I just get a contract?”

He grimaced at me. I was, clearly, a piece of shit, as far as he was concerned. I should point out I was dressed reasonably smartly. Jeans, jumper, iPhone, Nokia N95 and SHOES. I wasn’t even wearing trainers! (”sneakers”).

He stared derisively at me, then uttered, “It’s 400 bucks.”

“What is?” I asked. A sign! Movement!

“400 bucks deposit, to get an account,” he explained.

I did some ultra quick, ultra simple maths. 400 dollars is 200 pounds. Steep, but with most US Pay as you Go networks charging upwards of $1.60 per minute to call the UK, I’d have gone through 400 dollars worth of credit quickly. Plus, it’s entirely a business expense.

“Ok, that’s fine,” I said, taking out my passport and credit card. Your move, PUNK!

The chap’s pupils enlarged. He was clearly annoyed that his ploy hadn’t worked.

“It’s a two year contract,” was his next stupid statement. Take my money already!

“I understand, that’s perfectly fine,” I replied. At this point I’d had enough. I’d already looked up all these details on the internet and knew that I could terminate my contract — yes there’d be a fee — but all the termination and deposit fees in the world would be nothing compared to the costs of making 120 minutes worth of international mobile calls to the UK each day. I needed a work-horse of a phone to transact business while I was out here.

“I’m fine,” I explained, “with a 2 year contract, that’s no problem at all.”

Could we get on with doing business? No.

“Just, go and get a calling card,” he snapped and promptly turned his back and asked another customer if they needed help.

Transaction closed. OOOkay.

So, that’s Verizon, eh?

Coming shortly… my experiences trying to buy a phone at T-Mobile USA, AT&T, Sprint and Helio.

My Mobile Day by Mark Curtis, CEO of Flirtomatic

I’ve been an avid follower of Flirtomatic for a long time. It’s one of the best examples of a tightly integrated mobile and web service I’ve seen. It’s extremely popular with the youth audience, particularly in the UK. If you haven’t tried it, I strongly recommend taking a look at it, particularly at the sign-up and registration process which is very, very well thought out.

Mark Curtis is CEO of Flirtomatic. Not only is he a friendly and approachable chap, he’s intimately familiar with the mobile platform. So I wondered what his average mobile day would be like. He was kind enough to keep a note of his mobile usage across the 31st of January — so here we go, over to Mark.

- - -

Mark Curtis, CEO of Flirtomatic - How do you use your mobile phone across the average day?

OK so lots of this is going to be complete fiction because I’m terrified (a bit) of looking like a delinquent low level mobile technology retard rather than the power user I should be (like Ben Smith for example who is clearly arc-welded to his device).

So I did not use my phone to wake up – I already have an alarm with much bigger numbers and an easy to hit snooze button.

After getting up with some reluctance I did some exercise. I still didn’t need the phone but did use the digital readout on the bike and a DVD (excellent unpleasant winter exercises for cyclists) on my iMac.

Only touched my phone on the way out of the house when I picked it up and checked for messages from my chairman who lives two hours ahead and has a habit of sending requests for information very early in the morning. Nothing today.

I used to use the phone as a watch but Santa brought me a Suunto Vector so now I check the barometer as I stand at the number 3 bus stop which tells me that it should be raining, and it is! Also check that I am only 15 metres above sea level, and guess what, I am! Not sure when I’ll get tired of that game.

At work I make lots of calls. Not really sure there’s anything interesting about that.

Note that operator contacts appear to be using Spinvox and wonder if “Flirtomatic” gets rendered into text accurately. Decide to use lots of hard words in the future like “concatenation” in an attempt to confuse the system.

I still get annoyed that predictive text in my phone has “Arsenal” but not “Chelsea”.

Spend a lot of time looking at our service on my Samsung G600. Really. Flirtomatic is cross-platform so it’s much easier to reference the service on the web when we are at our desks. It took a while before we got the discipline of looking on a handset routinely when discussing features, functionality and design overall. And of course in meetings if we need to peer at the service to chew over ideas it’s much easier to show the wap site on a projector off a laptop – simply because then we can all see it. Clustering round a handset just does not work, unless you want to get intimate….

We are currently working on an iPhone implementation for Flirtomatic so we have been playing a lot. No question, the browsing experience is terrific but we’re convinced that simple ergonomics dictate most web sites will need to have specific iPhone implementations in order to maximise usage. Why? Because links tend to be clustered too closely together and if your fingers are fatter than an elf’s pinky you’ll struggle to hit them accurately, unless you expand the page to a high level of magnification.

However I used the maps facility last weekend to locate a children’s play centre in south London and took the device with me in case I got lost (I don’t have Sat Nav).

Although the use case is eye-catching, I suspect the number of times I’ll actually need it in one year will be few. There’s a lot of complete tosh written about location based services which is based on compelling sounding use cases (“Hey! Carlos lands in a strange city and needs to buy a pair of boots before booking a nice restaurant recommended by locals….”). These usually star fictional road warriors with more money than sense and poor organisational skills.

I could pretend that I bluetoothed new songs onto my phone yesterday, but I did that ages ago. Writing this is making me realise I’m bored with the current selection but equally not yet motivated enough to do anything about it.

What I did do was check out the user experience of another mobile service – I won’t say who – by downloading it into my phone. I was shocked – not for the first time – by how poor the user flow and communication was in this critical discovery phase. We’ve addressed this issue of provisioning again and again and I still don’t think we have it perfected. But I’m damn glad we abandoned the application download route in 2005.

If I told you I’d used wap to check football scores the savvy reader would know that this was an untruth, because there was no football on Thursday. But I do use this frequently at weekends: apart from Flirtomatic it is probably my prime browsing usage. Browsing of course is the wrong term: it’s highly targeted and specific.

Other uses which did not figure… Train times (quite frequently – the Orange portal service is very good), some e-mail checking (but I’m rarely far from a PC), photos from time to time. The latter are usually triggered by family or compelling place or landscape.

Overall I’m in no doubt at all that as phones become more iPhone like – and they will – I’ll use the mobile internet much much more. When I’ve had my hands on the iPhone (Bill the developer needs it a lot of the time) that’s been the case. Often to solve spontaneous on-the-spot queries such as what kind of reviews has this or that new album or film had….

It’s all about habit. Old ones are hard to break, new ones must be easy to learn. Our usage rates convince me the mobile internet has a glittering future. Now services and experience need to catch up.

- - -

Thank you Mark!

(If you’re a mobile industry executive — or a mobile fanatic — drop me a note if you’d like to do feature in a My Mobile Day case study).

Whatley’s Apple iPhone dilemma continues unabaited

Whatley is a Symbian guy, through and through. He’s got more applications on his Nokia then I can shake a stick at. But he’s tempted, sorely tempted by Apple’s iPhone. I suspect the o2 unlimited data plans are also annoying the hell out of him as he’s stuck with Vodafone’s paltry offering. But will an all new (well, not really) 16GB iPhone finally push him into the o2 shop?

- - -

I am not a ‘Mac Person’.

I’m getting there, (before you all start booing and hissing), and I’ve been known to get a bit ‘Mac curious’ every now and then.

It’s not through lack of trying though. In fact the other day I borrowed a MacBook Pro from SpinVox to take home and ‘test drive’ for the weekend. Only problem was it was one of those weekends when all of a sudden you have NO TIME to do a single bloody thing and I ended up handing it back Monday morning having only figured out how to get the bloody thing online, (and that took long enough).
Anyway – as I said – I’m getting there. One day I’ll make the jump.

The same thing however cannot be said for the iPhone.

I was at a lunch recently where upon I found myself sitting next to the editor of Mac Format magazine. He and I were discussing mobile et al and of course we ended up comparing devices. “Eww…” he said, looking my N95 “Already I’m thinking ‘PC! PC!’ I don’t know how you do it mate…” – and I in turn went on to mock his iPhone loveliness.

“But can yours do THIS?” he said, free scrolling up and down web pages like he hadn’t a care in the world.

“Well… No. But…”

“Come on. What’s so bad about it?!”

“Well… Er… the price for a start.”

“Forget the price. We know it’s over-priced. What else?”

“Um…”

And I stumbled. I lost my thought process. I looked at the N95 in my hands and the iPhone in his and I just stared blankly, grasping around for something… anything… that would aid me in my explanation…

Suddenly it came to me:

“Well no 3G for a start, or HSDPA. Plus the camera leaves a lot to be desired, (the one you do have doesn’t have a flash) and then there’s MMS…”

And I was away, fighting my corner like a true N95 loving mobile geek.
Once again all was well in the world.

However, I must say that as much as I profess to be an iPhone critic I cannot deny its beauty, its simplicity, and its innovation. Its sheer impact on the on industry we all know and love so well is truly something to behold.

Eventually, Mr Mac Format and I came to a friendly truce. He pointed out that I was probably never the target market for the iPhone in the first place and I acknowledged that the iPhone ‘mark 2’ would no doubt fix all the problems that I currently had with the device.

I applauded Apple for creating a device that my Mum could pick up and use and I also added that the masterstroke that was making the menu screen the same as the home screen was just pure Genius. Talk about removing barriers to entry. Brilliant.

So why the iPhone love?
Why now, after all this time?
Have I fallen over and bashed my head somewhere around SpinVox HQ?
Well …No.

The fact is I still mock and point and laugh at anyone who’s mug enough to fork out the minimum £900ish that is required for an iPhone in this country, (on o2 in the UK it is £269 for the 8GB variant + £35pcm (min) for the 18mth contract = £899), and I still insist on putting everyone off of purchasing one wherever I go and whoever I talk to.

The question I always ask is: “Why do you need an iPhone?”

The answer is often: “I need one.”

Wow.

A pure emotional decision that is not based around utility whatsoever, just some clever marketing, (and I don’t say that lightly; ‘clever marketing’ in this instance is like saying Britney Spears is ‘a bit mental’), huge brand awareness and a near-subconscious desire to own this beautiful thing that can only really explained if the Pied Piper of Hamelin appeared in the ads himself.

So what else drives this insatiable need? The price puts me off. I’ve made that much clear.

But we’ve also established that I am not the target market for this handset. Are you?
We’ll come back to that one…

Ewan recently wrote that the iPhone would ‘only ever be a bit player’. Well given that it is merely one handset in a market of thousands well then I’d have to agree. But of course that wasn’t the intention was it? The intention (as was clearly laid out by some of the more balanced comments to that piece and of course by Mr Jobs himself), was to gain a single digit market share.

Here we are less than one week away from the biggest and most highly regarded event in the mobile sector and Apple seem to have done just that. Maybe next week we’ll see what the industry reaction is. What have the other handset manufacturers got up their sleeves?

If anything…

Coming back to the target market question – I’ll leave you with the comments I made a few days back in response to another iPhone piece:

“It’s interesting -

When it comes to the pricing issue - you do have to stop for a moment and think about why o2 launched the iPhone at that RRP.

In the UK the economy in general has recently seen a downturn in overall sales of products but an upturn in overall value of said market(s). Consumers are fleeing the every day, mass-produced, mass-market products and are saving their cash and investing in the latest luxury ‘designer’ items.

Therefore there’s a school of thought that o2 knew exactly what they were doing when they launched at £269.99 + contract. They were pricing the everyday ‘common man’ consumer *out*.

Instantly making the iPhone tap into that hidden snob inside us all, (well, not us, but them, y’know… The Normobs).

I was at dinner recently and the two gentlemen at the next table were talking; discussing work etc… and halfway through one exchange the gentleman diagonally opposite to me produced and iPhone from his pocket, waved it sufficiently around to make sure that everyone saw and then placed it on the table in front of him.

Conversation stopper right there. Followed by gasps of

“You’ve got one?! Where from? OMG it’s gorgeous! Does it do email?”

Etc etc…

The iPhone has been subconsciously marketed as a luxury device. By having one you are instantly making a statement: “Look at me. Look at what I can afford.”

I actually heard someone say recently: “I want an iPhone. I can afford one too. I just don’t think I’m cool enough. I don’t deserve one yet…”

The device is *cool*, outside of this industry we all move in. Yes we think it lacks key features… that’s because it does.
And yes we think it’s over-priced… Well that’s the point.

o2 don’t want every Tom, Dick and Harry to have one.
o2 want every Tom, Dick and Harry to WANT one.

And trust me, they do.”

_______________________________________________

I’ll be in Barcelona next week, attending Mobile World Congress with SpinVox. If you’re going to be at the conference, why not come say hi? We’ll be in Hall 2, stand 2D33. Trust me; you won’t be able to miss it.

See you there!

Palringo could rule the mobile social interaction world

Screenshot0005

Palringo is our application of the week! This is our first collaborative look at an application, thanks to the all new Application of the Week Panel who have weighed in with their experiences and helped test and play over the past days.

Quick word of warning: This is a long post. If you’re half interested in mobile social networking, do read on. If not, do a quick skim and remember to check out Palringo.

First — Twitter.

I am a Twitter user. I’m not as prolific as the likes of Pat Phelan, who like many nowadays, lives on the medium. I often wake up here in San Francisco to 30-40 text messages from fellow Twitterers around the world and I do find it an engaging way of keeping up to date with people.

You can, by the way, get a notification via Twitter (by text, if you like) every time we post a blog — we publish the headline and a link to the post on Twitter. Just look up and follow the username ’smstextnews’ (http://twitter.com/smstextnews).

The biggest problem I’m having now with Twitter is it’s inherent limitations. More and more often, people are putting web links in their Twitter posts. The arse with that is when I click with my stupid standard Nokia or Windows Mobile browser, it’ll take a good week or so for the page to load up. So I don’t.

More recently, I’ve had Twitters from people saying ‘check out this picture from Flickr’ — and I don’t. I can’t be arsed. Not when I’m walking back from the gym or sat on a train. I can’t be arsed to wait for the sodding thing to load up. Useless.

And the shittest thing ever: QIK Twitter updates. I keep on getting messages from people telling me that they’re ‘broadcasting on QIK — join me’. Let’s be clear, QIK is a piece of genius. But a Twitter post telling me to click on a URL that I can’t possibly view with my piece of rubbish browser… hardly useful.

So these multimedia style ‘conversations’ taking place by Twitter, they’re all well and good if you’re on your computer (or, failing that, an iPhone with a WiFi connection).

Ultimately there’s not a lot you can do with 140 characters.

Why is Twitter good? Why are so many technogeeks loving it? Well, it’s ‘real time’ — it’s ‘happening now’. Someone told me the other day, I think it might have been perhaps Alex Meisl from Sponge — that, on average, a text message is read within minutes whilst an email is read within 48 hours. So when I get a note from Pat Phelan by Twitter, I treat it massively, massively different than when I get an email from him. His Twitters keep me updated with him. Likewise, tune into ’smstextnews’ and you’ll get the odd update about who I’m meeting — now or soonish.

This kind of social connectivity that we’ve been experimenting with Twitter has been, let us not forget, largely the domain of the ‘TechCrunch 100,000′. Yes there’s lots of ‘users’ of Twitter. But there are 254 million wireless subscribers in the US alone (estimates CTIA). I’d go so far as to make this broadly sweeping statement: none of them have ever heard of Twitter.

Or Jaiku, or Pownce.

Worse — and this is the ultra biggie — when you explain the Twitteresque microblogging concept to a normob (”normal mobile user”), they generally don’t care.

The kiss of death for me, when I’m evaluating services, is care. It’s nothing short of horrific to witness, when you think you’re sat there with a brilliant service that you’d love for the normob to adopt… only to have them not care.

That’s, unfortunately, where we are with the Twitaiku (”twitter-jaiku”) style services at the moment.

The masses don’t give a toss.

I talked to Issah the other day — our 15 year old reporter from London. He’s a super barometer of what the East London youngsters are doing with their mobiles. He’d never heard of Twitter. Arse.

What’s the ‘problem’ with Twitter? Well… it’s text-based. It’s possible to use your mobile web browser (or desktop) to update. But the only way you can get updates to your handset without requesting them is to get text alerts. Which you naturally reply to — via text. So, it’s a text based service.

It’s useless for sharing photos.

It’s useless for sharing anything, actually.

But it paved the way. Text is great — up to a point — and more and more, I’m noticing my Twitterati evolving from pure text messages to trying to use the service to swap other media.

If they’re anything like me, these Twitter power users, then they’ll identify with this viewpoint:

What I really want is the ability to real-time share voice, video, pictures and text between my friends, work colleagues and the public.

And what’s more, I want that RSSed to hell. I want it working and speaking to my favourite resources. That is, I want photos I share to be copied to Flickr with a ’shared’ tag, date and (ideally) GPS timestamp, so I can always find them.

I want my videos streamed nicely to anyone who’s subscribed. If you’re watching real-time, great. If not, you should be able to catch up when you want.

In short, I want ewan.rss — that comprises everything I’m doing. Pictures, video, blog posts, the whole shebang. And I want it to WORK.

I can do all the above, right now. I *do* it. But it’s all over the sodding place. There’s a Flickr feed here, a MoblogUK feed there, an audio feed over there, a blog feed here, a Last.fm feed here…. geez. It’s all over the place.

And sharing anything is (excluding using ShoZu) generally a total arse.

If I’m talking with Krystal at SMS Text News on my phone about something and I want to send her a photo, I don’t want have to:

1. Go to main menu
2. Go into camera
3. Open lens
4. Take picture
5. Click Send
6. Click By Email/MMS/whatever
7. 14-clicks to find her address
8. SEND

I don’t want to ShoZu the image either — not in this context. I want to send it to Krystal now. Now. While I’m talking to her. While we’re in an instant messaging stream together. I want her to be able to access the proper full size image if she needs to, on the web. But I want her to look at the pic on her phone. Immediately. Not in 40 minutes. And I want her real-time feedback on it.

So if you’re sat on Agile Messenger, that’s er… not possible. You need to come out of it, send the picture, then return to it. You can, I know, send short audio bursts with Agile — works quite well, but the problem is the person on the other end is using a different IM player so they have to click to listen. It’s not real-time. If you’re using MSN on mobile, IM+, or any other mobile instant messenger… chances are it’s more or less exclusively text.

Which was fine in the 1990s.

But not anymore.

Enter Palringo.

Born in 2006, they just got a whopping $10m investment. They’re, amusingly for a mobile tech company based in Ipswich/Newcastle UK (= the middle of nowhere) … and 21 year old founder Martin Rosinki has a potential corker on his hands.

I’ve been following Palringo for quite a while but as the chatter across the internet increased, the arrival of the investment and the widespread availability of the client software, I reckoned it was time to check it out properly. I’ve recently been doing a lot of analyst style perspective briefings for various investment houses and in those briefings I’ve been pointing to Palringo as a possible huge, huge player in the months and years to come.

(Their post money valuation will, no doubt, put them at a bit of an uncomfortable price for many of the big players .. but they ought to get in quickly before the service hits critical mass).

Palringo is billed as a ‘voice instant messaging’ client/server service. For a long time I thought it was just-another-IM service. No. There’s a huge amount of work gone into the voice and picture interfaces.

Essentially, Palringo your integrated, persistent social media medium. Bit of a mouthful, but let me explain.

First of all, the clients. You can put Palringo on any Windows Mobile or Symbian device. There’s also a java client so, theoretically, if you close your eyes really tightly and pray, it might even work on a Motorola.

There’s a web based interface. It’s ridiculously poor at the moment. I’ll get to that.

Download the client and login. Now, the UI is appalling. Again, I’ll get to that, so just assume that you’ve spent days playing with it when you’re reading the following description, yes?

Login. Click on to a friend — in this case, we’ll use Krystal as the guinea pig. Type hi.

Palringo is running quietly in the background on her handset. She’s on an N95.

Her N95 makes a (disgustingly boring) noise to alert her. She pops up Palringo and sees my message.

To send a reply, she needs to choose her weapon:

1) Text
2) Voice
3) Photo

Just like you have an input box at the bottom of your MSN conversations, Palringo follows the same model, although you press the left or right controls to swap between communication methods.

She types hi.

I decided to speak to her. I select ‘voice’ and push down on my ‘enter’ button whilst talking away. Palringo records what I’m saying and immediately transmits it to the Palringo server. On Krystal’s handset, it says ‘Ewan: Voice message’ and a little dialog appears indicating it’s being downloaded. The process is quick — within a second, Krystal hears my message.

In response, Krystal decides to send me a picture. She moves far right to select ‘picture’ and the option to ‘capture’ appears. She presses the button, aims the camera, clicks and presses ‘back’ when she’s done. The image immediately uploads to Palringo and at the same time I see ‘Krystal: Picture Message’ appear. Clicking on that message, I get the option to view what appears to be a full size picture from her N95. I can save it to my handset or carry on communicating.

The whole experience is fascinating — because it’s so compelling. So immediately ‘real’ — all there in one window without arsing about. No secondary applications.

It works perfectly on any 3G connection — and it’s even smoother on WiFi.

So that’s talking with Krystal. But if I like, I can configure Google, MSN, AOL, Yahoo and so on — so I can talk to my friends whilst I’m on the move. I can exchange audio and pictures with them too… but since they’re not using Palringo, they’re sent links to listen to audio and view pictures instead. No problem.

Where Palringo really starts to get exciting is when it comes to groups. You can, it appears, create any number of groups. I made an ’smstextnews’ group and invited the Application of the Week panel to join. I had to do the invite by traditional mail — there doesn’t (yet) appear to be an invite function.

Groups is something else though. Whilst I was sat in the restaurant at the Marriott in San Mateo, I created the group and Krystal and Barney joined a few minutes afterwards. The diners around me weren’t that impressed when almost immediately, a 15 second voice message from Barney blared out across the restaurant. It was Barney testing out the group voice function. Suffice to say it works but it was very, very loud. (There’s an option for changing that).

Within minutes Krystal was sending pictures of her dog Shopsy into the group chatroom and we were all interacting with each other. I logged out the service and came back in. Scrolled up. There was everything I’d missed in the past few minutes. Smart!

I got in the car and began driving back to base as Krystal and Barney carried on testing. I spent most of my 30 minute journey listening (and agreeing) to Barney’s Palringo analysis that he sent in a series of voice messages from the beach as he was walking about with his family in New Zealand.

I was driving across California, Krystal was snowed in just outside Toronto and Barney was walking on the beach in New Zealand. And we were all collaborating — or exchanging — or interacting, on an entirely different level than I’ve ever experienced before.

It’s hugely compelling, because it is *so* easy. By default, Palringo stays on in the background (there’s a power-save mode), so at any spare moment, it’s easy to send a picture into your group chat or whack a surprise voice message to a friend.

The key point with voice messaging — or ‘push to talk’ as they know it here in the States — is that it’s ultra quick. ULTRA quick compared to text messaging. So I found myself using it more and more often across the days as I played with Palringo.

Exchanging photos is something else. Palringo is, I think, very close to mobile nirvana for sending and receiving photos and audio. It’s what MMS should have been. You just click right (to select ‘picture’ as a medium) and then click ‘capture’. Your camera appears, you snap and the picture’s started uploading. Disseminating your real-time experiences by photo (and audio) has never been so simple.

It also changes the model on sending photos from your phone. At the moment I’m quite careful what I take pictures of. That’s because I know there’s a bit of involvement going on — I don’t want to take pictures of stupid stuff as it’s all going to be uploaded. But, … when I’m in a Palringo chatroom, I’ll take a picture of the sky, the table, the desk, the … whatever.. it’s so easy and so simple to show your chat companions how what you’re seeing. Integrate video streaming (which, I’m sure is on the agenda) and the experience will be phenomenal.

If the interface wasn’t so appalling, I’d have got all my normob friends on to it right away. I can imagine setting up tons of groups — ‘Ewan, Tom and James’, for example, as a ‘room’ to talk with two of my good friends from University. I think my other half would use this like no tomorrow. Just, the interface is such that she won’t. I can guarantee you she’d never-in-a-million-years look at it. Not now. Make it simpler and clearer and .. bring it on.

Now, everything you’re saying, sending or receiving is being recorded on the Palringo server. You can login on the web and review the individual chats and the group chats. In fact, if you fancy being a bit geeky, you can sit and watch it all unfold by refreshing the web browser. Alas, the web browser interface is … well, an after thought. It’s simply a database query wrapped up in a few HTML tags. You can’t ‘do’ anything with the information. You can’t subscribe to it. That’s stupid. Plain stupid.

If you want to ‘use’ a photo that you sent into chat… well, you can’t. You can view and save it via the mobile application or you can … well.. you look at it on the web.

Yes.. that’s right… you can, er, look at it. Some bright spark’s made the images pop up in a beautiful flash-based viewer. No word of a lie, I kid ye not: The options are — click on picture, view picture, close picture. D+

Not even D+, actually. The web is nothing better than an after thought.

My mistake, I think, is analysing Palringo in the context of a next generation mobile web service. That’s what, I think, it should be. However the developers have given next to no thought about extending the service at the moment.

The major problem with Palringo is multiple chat streams. If you’re anything like, me you tend to have 2 or 3 conversations going on at once. That’s a downright arse with Palringo, unless you’re in a group chat room. Try applying the existing instant messaging model and you’ll find yourself really, really pissed off.

Many of the Application of the Week panel — and I’m talking seasoned mobile geeks and entrepreneurs who KNOW their way around multiple mobile platforms — were struggling to get a handle on how to chat to people. Download it and have a play, you’ll see what I mean quickly.

Let’s have a look at the application on Symbian:

Here’s the main Palringo screen — this is where you get your notifications.

Screenshot0004

Here I am in ’smstextnews’ — you can see the list of people who are subscribed to the chat room along with their status:

Screenshot0005

Click into ’smstextnews’ and you’ll join the smstextnews chat. You can see I’ve recently sent a voice message, Krystal said Hi and Barney was the process of sending a voice message to us.

Screenshot0001

I joined the chat room and Krystal saw me — and immediately sent me a picture:

This is us in the ‘group’ chat room, smstextnews. You can see I’ve recently sent a voice message, Krystal said Hi and Barney was the process of sending a voice message to us.

Screenshot0001

I clicked on that ‘picture message’ note and up popped the photo:

Screenshot0008

The immediacy of this experience is what makes Palringo phenomenal. I can really see the millions of Facebookers adopting and using this sort of method for near instantaneous (yet persistent) social networking.

I’ll go one better: Palringo is potentially better than Facebook because it’s mobilised. Palringo is what Facebook mobile should be.

But Palringo’s interface stinks.

It sucks. Sucks granny’s eggs. HUGELY. It is one of the worst conceived interfaces (both web and mobile) that I have *EVER* *EVER* seen from a $10m+ company. It’s not a bootstrapper anymore. It’s not just founder Martin in his bedroom. Therefore … let me take one more aim at the UI with my canon: IT SUCKS.

But the concept is phenomenally sound. The technical implementation is, once you get over the UI, excellent.

So the UI can be fixed. It must be fixed.

Speaking of which, here’s a look at the rather sparse web version of Palringo:

Picture 17

It’s actually flash based — which, although rather pretty at points, is highly limiting in terms of manipulating the content — my content, our content — not a sniff of an RSS feed in site. Sure this isn’t a massive problem for your average end-consumer… but not even a hint of Facebook integration?

Enough of my perspective. What of the Application of the Week panel? Originally I was going to lift one or two comments from the panel’s feedback — however we got such excellent replies that I’ve changed things around and reproduced as much as possible below. I found it brilliant reading the panel’s viewpoints — keep in mind that each member either works in the mobile industry or is a self confessed mobile nut. We posed the following general questions to them — here, in no particular order, is what they thought:

How easy was it to get started (download/signup/install)?

Jonathan G: Pretty straightforward as S60 applications go.

Ed C: Simply 10/10. easy, informative and as it should be.

Pedro: Very easy to download, site identified my device straight away and selected the right version, although a little disappointing that I had to signup on the regular site which contradicts the .mobi concept.

Jonathan J: I downloaded the S60 version of the app to my Nokia E65 with no problems, using the Nokia installer in Nokia PC Suite. Installation & signup went fine.

Adam: Download and install good, recognised the device (Windows Mobile) and client installed without a problem. Left a bit unsure why I needed to use the web site to sign up and what it’s for really. Would have been nice if their homepage rendered specifically for the device screen size when browsed from the mobile.

Dan: * Download - Very easy to install.You go to their website and select symbian from the drop down box in the downloads link on the main page and enter your mobile number. A SMS is sent and you download it via your mobile browser or just click on the download tab. Installation - From your mobile browser, just select the version you want (Symbian or Java) and install on your phone as normal. If downloaded off the site, send to phone as usual. Registering - Simple. Enter your email address and a password and you are a member. Change your nickname by clicking identity tab.

How easy was the application to use?

Jonathan G: Takes a bit getting used to the interface, but in general it’s pretty easy and very cool.

Ed C: To be honest I did not get the hang of it! I didnt find it that user friendly and there was no notes in the ‘help’ section to… well… help me. Things like MSN messenger were obvious but it took Ewan to explain to me how to access the group chat and still I did not find this overly easy to use.

Pedro: Easy for most part, although the app kept asking for which connection to use, despite having just selected it a few minutes before (network fluctuations?). Easily fixed by going through settings and choosing to remember the connection, but this should have been set by default (and by the way, remembering 2 different connections would be nice, e.g. 3G and Wifi).

Jonathan J: Easy in some respects. However I couldn’t download the pictures or listen to the voice messages in the group chat, they just wouldn’t download. When I exited Palringo & relaunched the app, the messages had all disappeared, presumably because I had read them! So I never got the pictures or voice messages. Earlier today I couldn’t work out why Palringo wouldn’t connect. I then realised that the auto connect option had changed from 3G to WiFi & because I was out it couldn’t see my WiFi. Would be good if Palringo put up a warning about why it couldn’t connect. It had me thinking their server was down.

Adam: Nice a quick, slick, generally well thought out

Dan: Adding existing IM is quite easy. Then you use it as a normal IM package like IM+ - sending messages etc.

What did you like about Palringo?

Jonathan G: While it’s great to have IM integration with all of your accounts (and it’s great), the real cool comes from using the voice and picture options. I really like being able to send voice messages across the globe in real time and could see using this in cases when it might not be safe to do IM, but too expensive to do a call.

Ed C: Liked the fact you can send pictures and push to talk. These options are very easy and obviously displayed.

Pedro: Different IM accounts possible, with a clean status /home screen. Chat room within a group of contacts is a good retro function, very IRC!

Jonathan J: User status, although I would love to be able to update my status on Facebook, Jaiku, Twitter, Palringo etc in one go! Group chat. Palringo could be a fun way for a group of friends to keep in tough. Also could be useful in a small company or maybe a sales team to keep track of your colleagues.

Adam: Nice interface and styling

Dan: The main thing is that its free! That is one GREAT thing as many of its competitors aren’t.

What didn’t you like?

Jonathan G: It’s yet another service and account … I’d much rather see this work on top of my existing IM or social net stuff. Getting my friends on is a hurdle… I’d also really like to be able to change the notification sounds. Not sure what it is about S60 IM clients, but they all have sounds you can’t change! At least we can adjust the volume. I also encountered a bug and was not able to add a friend, though I was added by someone else. The person I tried to add was also not able to add me… I contacted Palringo over Palringo, but did not hear back.

Ed C: Most of it to be honest! I dont think I got the best out of it as I couldnt work it out so user interface and no help instructions basically!

Pedro: Despite having the option of minimising the app, whenever a contact sends a message, only an audio alarm is given, no visual message. Left too many chat requests unattended, am not a popular friend at the moment…

Jonathan J: Kept asking for an access point to be selected until I discovered a setting to tell it to remember the access point. This should have been more obvious! It should have asked if I wanted to remember the access point. The online indicator didn’t fit on the screen (too many characters for the line). Solved this by changing my nickname but the software should automatically reformat. Could not login to my Windows Live Messenger account. Very limited Help.

Adam: There are of course a few niggly little features that could be as much personal preference as anything. The big issue for me was the photo messaging functionality. 1) You could only capture shots to send rather than photos from your device. I’m thinking of the scenario where someone comes online and you want to show them what you’ve been up to/seen/etc. 2) Photos to MSN Messenger on the PC worked well but from the PC to the phone didn’t work at all. I’m sure there is a good technical reason but if I’m sending pictures to someone it’d be good to get them back.

Dan: Having all your contacts in one window is not to my liking. They should be on their own imo. It would be nice if you could set it all up on the website (as it doesn’t seem possible).

The best feature is…

Jonathan G: Voice Chat

Ed C: Push to talk and Picture sending functions.

Pedro: It can be uninstalled. Too many competitors, prefer Fring.

Jonathan J: Group chat.

Adam: Being able to zap a photo over to someone, hopefully at their desk, to taunt them with what you’re doing and it not having to pay for an MMS to do it. Would be fantastic when roaming.

Dan: It been an all in one IM application so you don’t need different ones for different clients and its FREE!

Other comments?

Ed C: Definitely has potential and I think would be a great app for me to use if I knew how. Seems well built though and I encountered no bugs (or did i with bad user interface) some explanation of how to use the app would be a big positive. I will keep the app installed and use it for msn messenger on the move but thats about it!

Pedro: Cannot see the point of exchanging photos or the push to talk, I haven’t used those functions in any desktop IM version.

Jonathan J: When I closed Palringo & tried to relaunch it, nothing happened & I had to reboot the handset. Seemed an isolated fault. Would be good to have a photo against each user (like Jaiku).

Adam: In its current form it’s not really standing out against any other mobile IM clients. Getting the photo functionality sorted would, IMHO, start to give it some differentiation.

Would you recommend this to a friend/colleague?

Jonathan G: If you want to do inexpensive voice chat this seems like a solid
choice. Not sure I’d choose it just for IM…

Ed C: Probably not but thats because most my friends are not mobile geeks like me and would have no need for msn and general instant messaging on the move.

Pedro: No, other apps do the same better - the lack of visual alarms when minimised is a show stopper as far as I’m concerned.

Jonathan J: Yes

Adam: Not at the moment

Dan: Yes

Thank you panel! I’ve actually got one more expanded perspective from panel member Barney to publish shortly. I’ll get that up in the next few days.

I’ve been rather direct about Palringo — both in terms of positives and negatives — and the panel have been pretty direct in places.

Care to check it out for yourself? Pop over to Palringo, get it on your handset and meet us in the ’smstextnews’ group chat room to have a play.

Then let us know your thoughts here!

Group Review: Nokia’s Mail for Exchange v Dataviz’s Roadsync

Push E-mail Comparison

For S60 users there’s been two choices for some time over how to get push e-mail and synchronise natively over-the-air with an Exchange (or Zimbra!) server using the Microsoft Exchange ActiveSync protocol (as opposed to adding a third-party application as Blackberry or Good Mobile Messaging does). Dataviz’s Roadsync product was first to the market, but costs, and Nokia’s home-grown Mail for Exchange product which was added more recently, was free, but initially more feature-limited. After more-recent releases of Mail for Exchange added a number of key enterprise features and meeting invite functionality a number of commentators suggested Roadsync may not have much of a future. I’ve been testing them both in daily use for the last 9 months and these are my thoughts…

Product capability

Both products offer push e-mail with calendar and contacts sync to an Exchange server. Meeting invites are also supported by both products so they can be responded to from the phone. Only Mail For Exchange offers task syncing, but Nokia’s standard calendar application displays these either mixed in with the standard calendar view or in a single inflexible list making the use of this data less than convenient.

Screenshot0001

Roadsync allows all mail folders (either root or sub-folders of the inbox) to be synchronised and also allows messages to be moved between them [see right]. Mail for Exchange only allows access to the Inbox and does not allow messages to be moved.

Both products support the Exchange administration function ‘remote wipe’ in case of loss or theft, but only Mail for Exchange enforces the handset lock feature requiring an unlock code to be entered and performing a wipe if it is repeatedly entered incorrectly.

Both product also support access to the Exchange Global Address List although Roadsync’s approach provides a slightly better presentation.

Roadsync is the only product to support any Exchange 2007 features such as e-mail flags, online searching, UNC file share access and faster message retrieval, but I was unable to test this as I didn’t have access to an Exchange 2007 server.

Both product support N and E-series devices from Nokia, but Roadsync supports all of both ranges (plus some S60 3rd edition FP1 devices and some non-Nokia devices such as the new Samsung SGH-i520) whilst N-series support from Mail for Exchange is limited to more recent models.

Winner: Close, but Roadsync just. It has more features and differentiates in other areas through better interface. Administrator control of handset lock is likely to be a significant concern to enterprise users though.

Program status screens

screenshot0009screenshot0016

[L: Roadsync, R: Mail For Exchange]

Mail for Exchange presents information on the sync mode in use, status, last sync and what is being synced. Roadsync just displays the last sync time (the other information is available from the ‘Options’ menu).

Winner: Mail for Exchange

Settings and configuration options

screenshot0010ascreenshot0017a

[L: Roadsync, R: Mail For Exchange]

Connection settings for the two applications are virtually indistinguishable.

screenshot0011ascreenshot0019a

[L: Roadsync, R: Mail For Exchange]

Synchronisation control is also identical, allowing separate peak and off-peak settings.

Winner: Neither - near identical controls

Mail reading and writing

screenshot0023ascreenshot0024a

screenshot0025ascreenshot0026a

[Top Left: Mail For Exchange, Others: Roadsync]

Roadsync offers three viewing sizes and compresses message details into less screen space than Mail for Exchange which only offers one text size. As can be seen the smallest Roadsync font is still easily readable but requires much less scrolling.

Winner: Roadsync

Pricing

Roadsync is US$50 (around £25 at the time of writing) per device. Mail for Exchange is free.

Winner: Mail for Exchange

Stability and reliability

Roadsync is rock solid - over more than 6 months of use I never experienced a crash or an error. Mail for Exchange crashed several times over 3 months use and occasionally refused to send messages giving a ‘try later’ message that required a phone restart to work. It also interfered with Three’s Mobile Mail application causing the read/unread status of messages not to be updated correctly if they were changed remotely.

Winner: Roadsync

Overall

It’s a close call, but my choice is Roadsync - it’s a more reliable product that is marginally more functional in a few key areas that make a big difference to the user experience and speed of use. The cost is reasonable for a mature product that receives free updates regularly and new features, in the majority, are added before Mail for Exchange…. You get what you pay for.

——

Screenshot iconMuch kudos to Anthony Pranata who’s free Screenshot application made this (and many more) reviews possible. This would be my recommendation for an ‘application of the week’ to the committee!

My Mobile Day: Dave Evans, CTO of SurfKitchen

I’m delighted to be able to publish the first of our My Mobile Day features. Building on the excellent reception from the posts by James Whatley and Ben Smith, I contacted a number of industry executives to ask them to outline their mobile usage across an average day.

Image

First up is Dave Evans, CTO of SurfKitchen, the market-leading on-device portal provider. (That’s him above). SurfKitchen just launched SurfKit Phonetop, which delivers an integrated single platform of compelling mobile services — think widgetised mobile desktop. I’m going to see if I can take a look Phonetop in more detail shortly.

A bit of background on Dave: He originally joined SurfKitchen as Senior VP Product Marketing, responsible for evolving the current SurfKitchen products to dominate the emerging DUE software segment.

Prior to SurfKitchen, Dave was VP of Product Platform and Architecture at o2 — and, interestingly, the chap responsible for the development of the O2 Active programme and delivery of O2’s core data services platforms such as Games, WAP, Variable Charging, Music and emerging Service Delivery Architecture. I reckon Dave is one of the people to thank for me getting an XDA all those years ago then. Dave was also part of the core data products group driving O2’s strategic objectives of leading in Data.

Before o2, Dave was CTO of BTLooksmart delivering comprehensive search/directory solutions and associated advertising solutions to major internet portals such as Altavista, MSN and so on — and prior to this Dave held senior IT positions in Encyclopaedia Britannica and Argos.

So, what handsets does he sport? Well, he’s a fan of the Sony Ericsson K800i and he has the obligatory Blackberry for mobile email. On his K800i he points out that he runs SurfKitchen’s Phonetop suite of products — Phonetop, amongst other things, let’s you access a wide range of widgets and device services easily. I really need to get a look at it.

Ok, on with the commentary. Dave’s average mobile day:

- —

7:00am
Wake up, and have breakfast with family. Check through my K800i weather and news widget to see what is happening in the world, and my blackberry for emails that have arrived during the night – we have teams around the world – a true 7×24 operation.

8:00am
Drive into work – using a Bluetooth headset on the K800i I join our daily conference call with our offshore developers in India to track progress.

8:30am
Arrive into the office and put both K800i and Blackberry on charge

10:00am
Check train times into London for a meeting this afternoon, using the SurfKitchen Widget which gives me the departure times of trains for next 2 hours.

12:00am
Arrive at Reading Station and catch 12:00 fast train to Paddington

1:00pm
Check emails on Blackberry whilst on train, then head to Baker street on tube. On arrival I check Google maps to find the right street for the office.

1:30pm
Arrive in reception, and whilst waiting for customer, check emails, and updates to the news widget on my K800i home screen

2:00pm

Customer meeting – blackberry and K800i on silent

4:00pm
Leave customer meeting and walk to tube. Quick check on rail time widget- next train out at 4:45 arriving in Reading at 5:15, call my wife to let her know I will be able to pick my son up from school.

5:00pm
On the train catching up on email that arrived during the afternoon, quick call to CEO to update on progress with customer.

6:00pm
Pick up son from school – phones rings with call from work – son complains about the ringtone. I pass him the phone and he selects the downloads client and loads up one of the new ringtones.

8:00pm
Take son to football training – I wait for him, and monitor the premier league scores on my football widget, and browse through latest YouTube clips to pass the time.

9:00pm
Son finishes training – I give him the good news that Manchester United won again.

- - -

Heh, excellent — thanks for taking the time Dave!

If you’re a mobile industry executive and you’d like to feature in a My Mobile Day, drop me a note and we’ll sort it out. (PR enquiries welcome too)

How-to: N95 + ShoZu + Geotags + Flickr + GeoRSS + Google Maps = Mash Up Central!

This week Whatley is going all Web 2.0 on your ass. It’s all very well having these magnificent tools at our disposal — but how do you actually get them working? I’ve always liked the concept of geotagging my images — but haven’t quite got round to working out how to do it. It’s actually refreshingly simple. Here’s James with the overview:

- - -

There’s been a lot of buzz online lately about Nokia Beta Labs’ latest software release – the Nokia Location Tagger.

A quick overview from Nokia:

“With Nokia Location Tagger, you can automatically tag your location data to your pictures. As you take a picture, your GPS coordinates are saved to the EXIF header of the JPEG file. You can use this data later, for example, to locate your pictures on a map.”

That’s a great feature – Fantastic!
(more on the application of this functionality later)

Nokia also go on to say:

“In the near future, we hope to make location tagging a seamlessly integrated part of your Nokia experience. Until then, Nokia Location Tagger is a small standalone application that gives you a sneak preview. We are not planning to productize this application as such, but we’d love to hear your thoughts already now, so that we have time to take it into account in the mainstream development.”

EVEN BETTER!

However, I will not be using this application. I have absolutely no need for it whatsoever. Installing the Nokia Location Tagger onto my handset would be a complete and utter waste of time.

Why? Well, since downloading and installing Share Online 3.0 (another Nokia Beta Labs product) the Web Upload part of my N95 has been rendered useless. I’m told this is probably something to with http protocols on Vodafone; an early Jaiku beta release had similar problems. However the difference is I could uninstall Jaiku. This is not the case with Share Online 3.0. Grr…

So how do I upload media from my N95? Answer: ShoZu.

Yes it does all the cool things like photo/video uploads to all my sharing sites etc but Ricky covered most of that yesterday.

The ‘other’ cool thing that ShoZu does is… *drum roll please* …Geo Tagging!

That’s right. Exactly the same thing that Nokia’s Location Tagger! ShoZu however announced this feature at LAST YEAR’S 3GSM! …nearly a full year ago.

But I’m not here to moan about Nokia playing catch up AGAIN…

I mean, that thing that the iPhone does when you turn it like *that*?
SO cool.
Wouldn’t it be great if the N95 could do that?! If only it had something like a built-in accelerometer…

No wait.
;)

As I said – I’m not here to moan about that – I’m here to show you what this kinda stuff can DO!

Right then.

First you need a GPS enabled phone – an N95 for example.
Then you need ShoZu, (with the GPS tagging switched to ‘on’).

Once you’ve got those two sorted get yourself a Flickr account and enable the two following options:

1. Import EXIF Location Data - http://flickr.com/account/geo/exif/?from=privacy
2. Import Geotagged Photos - http://flickr.com/account/geo/import

All done? Good. Now take a few photos and upload as you like. Got that far? Excellent.

Now go to your Flickr page – here’s mine http://flickr.com/photos/whatleydude/

Scroll to the bottom and you should see some feeds – you want the geoFeed.

Image

Right click on that and then ‘copy link location’.

Once you’ve done that – get off to www.google.com/maps and right click, paste into the search box and ‘search maps’.

You SHOULD end up with something >like this:

N95 + ShoZu + Geotags + Flickr + GeoRSS + Google Maps = Mash Up Central!

Give it a go and see what you come up with. I was chuffed to bits when I finally got mine together and working correctly. Hence the desire to impart knowledge I guess. Two quick notes before I sign off. First a big thanks to the my Jaiku buddies who inspired me to put this post together and second to point out another great use of ShoZu.

Enjoy! J

The SMS Text News Annual — now in stock!

They’ve arrived! The first tranche of SMS Text News 2007 Annuals have arrived!

To those who’ve already ordered, your Annuals will be dispatched first thing tomorrow.

Here are some photos:

IMG_3817

IMG_3837

IMG_3822

IMG_3830

IMG_3827

IMG_3845

IMG_3840

IMG_3846

Yours for $50 plus postage at the SMS Text News Shop.

Unlimited Drinks San Francisco - 22nd of February 2008

IMG_2232.JPG

The next SMS Text News Unlimited Drinks is on Friday 22nd of February 2008 here in San Francisco.

I appreciate that this might be a big ask if you’re currently sat in London, Moscow (Hi everybody at MTS Russia) or Sydney. But you know, it’s a global village. And you could even buy some trees to offset your carbon emissions.

We’re going ultra-personal this time with San Francisco — Unlimited Drinks will be hosted at my rather superb penthouse in Nob Hill. (For the avoidance of doubt, I’d like to point out that I am, alas, not a yet a trillionaire with an apartment in every timezone — this is, alas, just the one I rented for the time I’m here).

Although it sports excellent views of the Golden Gate Bridge and the Bay, it won’t, I don’t think, hold the standard Unlimited Drinks capacity of 150 people so do email me quickly if you’d like to come along. Think fridges stuffed with unlimited drinks and some brilliant catering. (For those a little bit more at home with comfort food, I will, in true mobile blogger fashion, be proving the concept of mobile ordering by ordering a pizza from Pizza Hut via mobile — and possibly something from that Taco place via Gomobo.com)

If you’d like to join me for a relaxed evening of mobile related discussion (and to poke around with a lot of different devices), then whack me an email with ‘SF drinks = yes‘ in the subject line.

We’ll be operational from 6pm — you’re most welcome to pop by for a drink to say hi or pop by for longer. Expect a mix of friendly mobile and media related people. A critical point: There will be food. Tons of food. I’ve just done the catering order so if you’re coming straight from work, have no fear, there will be lots of stuff to eat (and obviously drink).

What is Unlimited Drinks?
It’s an opportunity to meet people from the mobile industry and related areas in relaxed surroundings. It’s also a personal thank you to you for reading. There are no badges, no feedback forms, no thumping music, no ‘one glass of wine’ rules. The guest list is strictly controlled, generally by huge hulks in dark coats with bad attitudes. I don’t tolerate arses (see the ‘attendee criteria’ below) because I don’t want to waste time talking to people without spark, enthusiasm or a bit of vitality. I don’t like going along to ‘networking’ events that aren’t managed. I like there to be a visible host to act as a central focal point (just in case you can’t find someone to talk to, you know how it is). Therefore at an Unlimited Drinks event, you’ll be met at the door by me — and I’ll most probably politely demand a business card (I know, old world) so I can remember to put you in my write-up of the event the next day (helps with the memory). I’ll then point you to the bar — or in the case of this upcoming event, steer you to the bar and the food and introduce you to some other attendees.

I host these events in different cities (watch out for Cape Town, Moscow and Sydney coming soon). The name of the event is related to the ‘unlimited data’ plans that many network operators have introduced — and they obviously all come with fair use policies. Ditto Unlimited Drinks — the fair use policy is heavily governed by my ability to pay the bill!

How are they funded?
It’s me who pays for the events — sometimes with some assistance from sponsors. Often Nokia are good enough to send us out some of their latest handsets to play around with during the evening and I try to bring along some other technology too (at the upcoming event, I’ll give you the opportunity to try and break one of the new JCB phones).

Attendee Criteria
My job is quality control. I manage the guest list because I don’t want to spend the evening surrounded by weirdos — and the other attendees don’t want that either. So, if you’re simply looking for a job and have no capacity for independent thought and zero passion for mobile, don’t email me — try out a ‘mixer’ or the like, because Unlimited Drinks is not for you.

If, however, you work in or around the mobile industry and you’ve got something to say — good or bad, or both — about what’s going on with mobile, good. Come on in! You needn’t work for a mobile operator — in fact, we often have attendees from all sorts of professions — PR, legal, accounting, marketing — the glue, the commonality, is a degree of passion for mobile.

Get on the list
Just knock me an email (ewan@smstextnews.com) with a one-liner about yourself and anyone else you’d like to bring and I’ll get you on the list. In order that your email doesn’t disappear into the vast void, you can help me out by using the subject ‘SF drinks = yes‘.

See you there? ;-)

We’ve launched a Facebook Application!

Living through the 90s and not getting involved in an internet start-up is like living though the 60s and not smoking,” — so said Serena Doshi (one of my co-founders from Liv4now.com — a long, long time ago).

I reckon, to paraphrase Serena, that living through 2007 or 2008 and NOT launching a Facebook application is like living through the 60s and not smoking.

So here we go.

I wanted to put a picture of the phone I am mostly using on my Facebook profile. So I knocked up an application to do that.

“WHY?” yelled my other half when I told her I’d done it, “Who would want to put a picture of their PHONE on their profile?” she continued.

I did my best at a reply: “Er, well, it’s just something that appeals to me. People do it on forum signatures and that sort of thing. So I wanted to do it on Facebook.”

She rolled her eyes and carried on writing a message to a friend. Via Facebook.

Anyway, here’s what it looks like when you add to your profile:

Image

And when you add the application and update, it puts these wicked little messages in your feeds:

Image

And it’s using the SMS Text News icon.

No branding on the application. But I do plan to update the application of the week on the bottom of it — that’ll be a link to the relevant piece on SMS Text News. If I can get the weekly update to change everyone’s profile.

I’d be most grateful if you could put it on your profile, perhaps just for a day or so, in order that I disprove the doubts of my other half.

To install the application, go: here/a>.

You can only select from some Nokias and an Apple iPhone at the moment. I borrowed the mini phone pictures from ShoZu’s site. I hope they don’t mind. I’m going to drop them a note and see. You can only select from UK and USA networks too.

I haven’t tested it with anyone. You’re, er, the guinea pig. So try it out and tell me if it’s a) a spectacular failure or b) it works?

Google Talk on Blackberry — my application of the week

Launched back in March 2006, Google Talk for Blackberry changed my perspective on mobile instant messaging forever. For a long time I thought the application was programmed by Google — however I later found it was the brain surgeons at Blackberry who developed it. And boy, what a job they did. It is, without a doubt, the best example I’ve ever seen of mobile instant messaging integrated into a handset.

Within days of it becoming available, my colleague Keith in Canada and I were nattering away to each other across continents, without computers. Not entirely amazing in itself — but it was the simplicity of use that I found to staggering. I was, finally, always-on.

I can’t list the amount of times this application has saved me. Previously, I had to open up my laptop, find an internet connection and then start an IM conversation. (I know there are other applications out there — but none with such tight integration) Having Google Talk always on and always with me, via the Blackberry, changed my life. I was able to go and have lunch when I wanted to. I was able to, for example, go shopping during work hours — safe in the knowledge that I could answer client queries as long as I had a signal.

I was even able to go on holiday. I have Google-Talked-via-Blackberry all across Europe, the States and even as far east as Indonesia. Many a time, particularly when we were running Impulse and I was in different cities every day, the application was brilliantly useful for talking with people back at the office when I didn’t have a net connection.

Here’s an example of the tight integration:

(Image via Wikipedia)

What’s more, responses from people pop up in your Blackberry Inbox so you never miss a conversation. If you know how to use a Blackberry, you can use Google Talk on it. My father routinely uses it throughout his business day as, I’m sure, do many others.

If you’d like it for your Blackberry, get it here. (You need to use Internet Explorer in order for it to work).

Pure genius.

We have, by the way, launched an Application of the Week panel — would you like to join? More info.

Mind the Gap!

mindthegap

For the last week or so we’ve been talking about how we use our mobiles on the site. Whatley and I have written diary posts and there’s been some really interesting contributions in the comments about the innovative services and applications people use daily. So I was surprised to read these survey statistics this week apparently suggesting the vast majority, the ‘normal mobile users’, have a very different experience:

  • Over 60% of us in the UK are using our mobiles for just text and voice
  • Only 1% had ever blogged using their device
  • Only 3% had used GPS/Sat Nav features
  • 30% had taken and sent pictures using the camera
  • 12% had used internet/email

So I set off to talk to some Normobs about their mobile usage and began to appreciate that a gap really does exist and some of the background for myself…

—-

Take a look at the cases below and then let me know your opinions is the comments: What barriers do you think there are to the adoption of mobile applications and services? Where do you send people for professional mobile advice? How do you publicise your mobile service if you have one? What do you see breaking the barriers and achieving mass-adoption? Who does it well and deserves some recognition?

—-

Case 1: Mobile Email - A friend runs a small charity sports organisation. He travels constantly organising events and stays in touch with players by e-mail.  Impressed by some visitors with ‘e-mail on their phones’ he did some homework on the network operator’s websites and called into a number of their shops for advice. He tells a story of confused and contradictory advice, being told variously that mobile e-mail is only available with a laptop, web-surfing and e-mail must be purchased separately and a 10MB per month allowance will be plenty - don’t worry about the over-run costs.

He’s ended up with an Blackberry device in addition to his existing handset and a push e-mail only service. Not a bad result, but less than he wanted for more cost. He knows he could sychronise his other data (Contacts and Calendar), but doesn’t know how. He knows he could have chosen other devices, but his operator told him this one w