An early look at the ultimate social networking tool

For several weeks I've been in a private beta test of a new social networking service designed to help mobile and PC users keep in touch and share ideas. I think it's the sexiest new product I've seen since the Nokia 7650, and even though it's still in early beta I want to talk about it.

I promised not to describe some of the details of their implementation, because the patents haven't all been filed, so I apologize in advance that I'll have to leave some blanks. But here goes...

The company, Inrvoice LLC, has great credentials -- it was founded by former engineers from Netscape and RIM, who teamed up with a group of biomedical researchers from UC San Francisco. It's funded by a consortium of A-list VCs from Stockholm and Palo Alto. That in itself is unusual -- usually startups like this are funded only in one region. But I think the cross-cultural aspect of the service make its appeal universal.

The folks at Inrvoice are targeting one of the key drawbacks of today's social networking software -- the need to type ideas and comments in order to share them with others. Instead, Inrvoice's software directly captures the thoughts of users, as they happen, and shares them automatically with everyone in the user's social network.

I'm not allowed to give all the details of the process, but suffice it to say that it involves Bluetooth wireless, the user swallowing a small sensor pill, and one of the first commercial deployments of nanomachines that I've heard of.

The product is called Spitr, and I'm sure you'll be hearing a lot more about it in the weeks to come.



Spitr's ability to share thoughts rather than typed words dramatically increases the efficiency and richness of interactions on social networks. No longer do you have to guess what one of your friends might be thinking on a moment to moment basis; no longer do you miss out on nuances or ideas that they might not normally have time to share.

As an example of Spitr's power, here's a real Spew (the company's term for a transcript of a user's thoughts). I've been asked not to give the user's name, but I can tell you that he/she is a blogger and executive at a major Web company, attending a recent conference:
11:45:39 i wonder if there are any new comments on my blog
11:45:44 huh, the next speaker is making a web service that recycles composted kitchen waste
11:45:47 i dont get it. who eats at home anymore
11:45:49 when the hell is the lunch break
11:45:48 this company doesnt make sense to me but arrington likes it so i should invest
11:45:53 i wonder if there are any new comments on my blog
11:45:57 damn my new shoes look cool
11:46:03 hey what the hell was that. did something bite me or did i just sit on a tack. wait if i grab my butt i'll look stupid. dont move
11:46:07 ow ow ow it really hurts
11:46:01 dont move dont move
11:46:04 maybe if i pretend to adjust my sock i can lean over and
11:46:07 ahhh much better
11:46:08 damn i sat on my usb drive. hope i didn't break another one
11:46:10 is that guy still talking about kitchen waste
11:46:12 tim looks really good in that jacket
11:46:15 i wonder if there are any new comments on my blog

Currently, Spitr Spews are only one-way: the user's thoughts are transcribed and sent in writing to other members, who read them on their PC or mobile phone. The company is working on two-way Spews which transfer thoughts directly between the minds of recipients, but needs to do more work before it turns on the feature. In an early two-way test, the thoughts of Steve Ballmer and Eric Schmidt were accidentally linked in a single session, producing a destructive feedback loop that took down Sprint's EVDO data network for twenty minutes. The company is confident that new filtering software can prevent those loops in the future.

Even in its one-way mode, Spitr makes an incredible improvement in the frequency and detail of social messaging. But once it becomes two-way, it'll really take off. I think some of the most promising usages are:

Workgroup collaboration. A work team in a company could be continuously linked to one-another in a two-way Spew. The effect would be like a continuous staff meeting 24/7, but removing all remaining illusions that people might actually be paying attention.

International understanding. Another exciting aspect of Spitr is that the company is exposing an API to the service, enabling others to create mash-ups of Spitr with additional web services. One of the first mashups has combined Spitr with BabelFish to produce BabelSpit, which produces instant translation of a user's thoughts into six different languages. Here's the translated Spew from a Japanese tech executive attending that same recent conference:

11:45:33 As for me it is not possible to believe those which these people make their kitchen scraps.
11:45:42 I putting, tonight it is possible to be able, whether or not you think in doubt.
11:45:48 I me Tokyo yakitori which is eaten and desire the fact that it returns to the beer which is drunk.
11:45:57 As for me it is necessary to arrange the hair of my ear.
11:46:07 That man is he grabbing his underside?
11:46:12 Whether or not there is new comment in my blog, I think.

Spitr's potential impact on international communication is obvious.

Celebrity interest groups. Fans of a celebrity could subscribe to a one-way Spew feed (a "Spweed") to monitor the thoughts of celebrities throughout the day. Inrvoice hasn't yet disclosed its financial model, but I believe this is how it will monetize the service. Imagine how much fans would pay to track Paris Hilton as she tries to remember whether she has a valid driver's license, or Britney Spears as she ponders the underwear yes/no question.

I think that's just the start, though. Every Spitr account automatically generates a Spew feed, giving each and every one of us the opportunity to auction off the last shreds of our privacy and create a circle of obsessive admirers. This is the ultimate evolution of social networking, and I expect to see Spweeds pop up rapidly on MySpace and weblog sidebars.

Biometric sharing. Since they're already placing sensors in the body, an obvious next step for Inrvoice is to add biometric data to the Spew feed. That's apparently what the company is planning, judging from the screen shot below that I found on a bulletin board:



One application of this could be to help a social group of teenage girls plan a shared trip to the bathroom.

I think this is a very powerful and extensible feature. Picture the company pairing the biometric data with the GPS in your mobile to deliver customized location-aware services. For example, you could configure your phone to automatically order a pizza delivered to your location whenever you reach a certain hunger level. Or you could scan a dance club for people with compatible levels of libido and blood alcohol.

The possibilities are endless.

Implications for the industry. I'll be interested to see how the Spitr service develops over time. There are sure to be efforts at clones from other companies, although the Inrvoice folks seem to be pretty confident that their patents will hold up. Google and Microsoft would obviously be interested, if only for the possibility of slipping ads directly into the thought streams of users. And I think it would be interesting to see what Apple would do with it, especially since Mac owners are already close to a group entity.

I'm sure we'll know more by the next time April first rolls around.

Video previews of Nokia's new 5700

The 5700 was announced by Nokia a few days ago. It is a combination of Nokia's 3250 and 5300. It has a twist design and is an XpressMusic phone. I found two clips on the phone. The first one is from symbianfrance. It shows the UI of the phone in action. The second clip is from clipset.net and I have no idea what language it is in. It does have an on screen translation though but it doesn't

Amazing video of Sony Ericsson Night Tennis Miami 2007

Night tennis is a special event which Sony Ericsson created. It was introduced last year in Madrid, Spain. The game is played in total darkness except for UV lighting. Players are dressed in special glow in the dark clothing. The ball glows in the dark along with the paint on the court. This is accompanied by a neon light show and world famous DJ's, Paul Oakenfold and Masters At Work. This looks

Hands on video preview of Sony Ericsson's Z750

Sony Ericsson anounced the Z750, their first HSDPA phone a few days ago at CTIA. This is the first hands on video I have come across (thanks to phonearena). Enjoy.

Flashing K800 to K810 results

I posted before about the possibility to convert the K800 to K810. Well, a member of esato has tried flashing his K800 with K810 firmware. He flashed the K810i R1KC001 firmware with wotanserver with success. Here are the results:- The photofix function is present but not that useful (not much different from photoDJ)- TrackID is also present- Java is updated to version 7.4- Date of firmware is 7/3

Pics of Sony Ericsson's Z310

The Z310 is a lower end version of the Z610. It has the same external shiny flip as the Z610. You can only see the screen when it's lit up. The Z310 doesn't look half bad considering it's price. It even has a camera and light effects.

Sony Ericsson Cyber-shot mock-up

This mock-up was created by 'Meilow'. He used the Ubiquam U-520 phone for inspiration. It has a 5 megapixel autofocus camera with xenon flash. The lens cover slides sideways and it has a shiny front like the K810. This Cyber-shot also supports UMTS. It actually looks quite good.

Video of Sony Ericsson's W580 fitness app

"With the W580 Walkman® phone you can even take your favourite tracks to the track. It will count your steps, your calories and monitor your running speed/distance/time. Add to that your best tunes for motivation and whether you’re on a run, in the gym or just out for a stroll, the W580 is the perfect fitness partner."Above is SE's description of the fitness app that comes with the Z580. This

Another hands on video of Sony Ericsson's W580

This is the third hands on video of the W580. This clip from phonearena is alot longer than gizmodo's video. I posted another video a few days ago. Enjoy.

K810 pic gallery and video

This is a bit old but still worth checking out. 'Rog' from se-community has posted a pic gallery and a hands on preview video of the phone. Enjoy.

MOTOKRZR SE Z610 hybrid

Well, I guess the folks in China decided to kill two birds with one stone...copy the design of the MOTOKRZR and Sony Ericsson's Z610. It comes in turquoise, pink and black just like the Z610. Well, everything else just reminds me of the KRZR. The phone is a dual band clamshell. It features a 1.3 mega pixel camera, 260k color 176x220 screen and supports t-flash memory cards. It's special feature

Sony Ericsson W850 copycat

This is a dual band slider phone. It features a 1.3 mega pixel camera, 1.8 inch 176x220 260k color screen and supports t-flash memory cards. It also has stereo speakers. One at the top of the phone and the other at the bottom. The main attraction I would say is the colorful lighting effect when a call or message is recieved. Not only did they copy the W850 design, the icons in the menu are copied

Nokia 5300 copycat

This is a dualband phone which features a 2 mega pixel camera, 260 k color 3 inch touchscreen and supports t-flash memory cards. The best part is that it even has a game emulator. I am guessing that it is a NES (Nintendo) emulator meaning there are tons of games (which are included). It is not a slider like the phone it is trying to copy. It also has gaming buttons. All this for only around 130$

Motorola Ming copycat

This phone from China features 2.2 inch 260k color 176x220 touchscreen, 2 mega pixel camera with LEDS and loads of other stuff. It also lists that the mp3 ringtones are very loud. What really catches my eye is the fact that the logo symbol looks almost identical to Motorola's symbol. Like most copycat phones from China, this phone is dualband and alot cheaper than the original Motorola Ming. It

Convert your K800 to K810

Well I don't mean the housing. Now you can flash K810 firmware to K800 phones. The K810 firmware has a slightly improved media player, more advanced themes and Track ID. Sounds good to me. Now all we need is to try to change the housing. Good luck to anyone who wants to flash their K800 with K810 software. The flashing is through wotanserver.

Helio's Ocean dual slider

This is one impressive device. It slides one way to reveal a number keypad and slides another way for a full QWERTY keyboard. It also isn't so big and doesn't even look thick or bulky.I find the screen a tad small though. Mobileburn has a hands on preview and a picture gallery.

Review of Sony Ericsson's K200/K220i

The K200/k220 are SE's low end phones. The handset measures 103х46х16.7 mm at weighs 82 grams. The phone features a VGA camera. The user interface is simple and easy to use. The difference between the K200 and K220 is that the latter has FM radio. Mobile-review has an in depth review of the phone. I think the phone looks good for it's price.

Sandisk introduces 4 gb memory stick micro

SanDisk expanded its Memory Stick Micro (M2) line by introducing a 4-gigabyte (GB) card.With the capacity to hold up to 1,000 songs, 2,000 high-resolution photos or 20 hours of MPEG4 video2, the 4GB M2 is compatible with Sony Ericsson’s latest generation of slim line, multimedia mobile handsets such as the Cyber-shot and Walkman® series. SanDisk announced the 4GB M2 at CTIA Wireless 2007.

Nokia 5070: Fun and function

Espoo, Finland - Designed with the needs of young consumers in mind, the newly announced Nokia 5070 features a compelling blend of fun and function for today's socially networked mobile customer. With strong messaging, leisure and personalization features, the Nokia 5070 has everything that the mobile social set needs. The Nokia 5070 will be available in the second quarter of 2007 with an

Nokia 5700 XpressMusic: Adding a new twist to mobile music

3G Smartphone can download and play tracks from range of Internet music storesEspoo, Finland - Today, Nokia revealed the Nokia 5700 XpressMusic, an accessible 3G smartphone augmented by a dedicated audio chip for enhanced music performance. The Nokia 5700 XpressMusic features an iconic twist design that easily switches between four modes at the flick of the wrist - music player, 2 Megapixel

Nokia 6110 classic?

The first phone is the 6110 Classic. It features:- Symbian S60v3- HSDPA 3.6Mbit- 15 mm thick- 2 inch QVGA screen with 16 million colors- 2 mega pixel camera (no AF)- Estimated price 2000kr = 291$ USThe second phone is the 6110 Slider- S40v3 (with multitasking capabilities)- 3G- 16mm thick (impressive!)- 2.2 inch QVGA screen with 16 million colors- 3 mega pixel camera with AF- Estimated price

Another excellent Nokia N93i review

This time the review was done by mobile-review. It was reviewed a while back back it was only in Russian. Now they have posted the translation into English. As usual, the review is extensive and in depth. Worth reading if you are interested in the N93i.

Nokia brings bold style of the L'Amour Collection to CDMA markets worldwide

New Nokia 7088 phone satisfies both the practical and passionate with high style and a strong feature setEspoo, Finland - Inspired by the same indulgent palate of colors and textures that has defined Nokia's L'Amour Collection as the pinnacle of mobile fashion design, the Nokia 7088 makes its debut today, bringing a new level of sophistication to the CDMA market. The Nokia 7088 is not only the

Sprint to Hollywood and Silicon Valley: Drop Dead

Okay, that's a deliberately provocative headline, but I was very surprised this week when Sprint gave more details on the rollout plan for its WiMax high-speed network. Keep in mind that Sprint's counting on support from the technology and content industries to help make its network successful. They want lots of new devices and lots of new services to drive usage of mobile WiMax.

So, what are the first nineteen cities where Sprint's rolling out WiMax?

There's Chicago, Detroit, Grand Rapids, Indianapolis, Kansas City, Minneapolis, Baltimore, Boston, Philadelphia, Providence, Washington D.C., Austin, Dallas, Denver, Fort Worth, Portland, Salt Lake City, San Antonio, and Seattle.

Let's see, what's missing? Oh, yeah -- the country's two biggest cities, New York and Los Angeles. Plus Silicon Valley.

Hey, I'm sure there are good reasons for the choices Sprint made. I'm delighted they're covering five cities in Texas, and it's great that the critical Rhode Island market will be nailed. But if it's essential to the success of your network that you get support from the tech and entertainment industries, wouldn't you make it a priority to let people use that network in the capitals of those industries, Hollywood, New York, and Silicon Valley? I mean, Portland's a wonderful place, but if I were trying to pick a city on the North American west coast that has tech and entertainment industry presence, I'd rank it just above Ensenada and Anchorage.

So I don't understand what Sprint's doing. I want to root for them, because I like the story they tell about their future business model for WiMax, but they're making it hard to love them.

________

A couple of other tidbits worth mentioning:

HTC, say it ain't so. Jason Dunn of Pocket PC Thoughts is blogging about CTIA for Microsoft. He says HTC hinted that its upcoming Advantage product will be priced at about $800. Advantage is very interesting technologically -- it's a Windows Mobile mini-tablet, a little larger than a handheld, and could make a very nice info pad. But the right price point for that product is $299. At $800, Advantage is going to be compared to low-end laptops, and it's vastly less powerful and capable than they are. I'm very concerned that if Jason's price information is correct, HTC is going to produce yet another tweener product that'll delight no one and give the info pad form factor a bad name. I love the way HTC is experimenting with different hardware designs, but I wish they'd be more clever about the target markets.

An alternate explanation for the reported collapse of Web 2.0. Venture capitalist Peter Rip reports that Web 2.0 as an idea must be falling apart because traffic to two major Web 2.0 commentary sites, GigaOm and Tech Crunch, has been dropping since late 2006. Peter makes some other very interesting points, in particular on the difficulty of moving Web 2 from a tool to a platform. But I'd like to suggest an alternate explanation for the traffic decline he noted: Maybe those websites have just gone stale. Magazines go through cycles -- for example, in business magazines Forbes was pretty interesting in the1980s, while Fortune was dry as day-old toast left by the side of the road in Arizona. Today their positions are reversed. I think the same sort of cycles are likely to happen in websites, and may be even more frequent, because so many sites depend on a single author who could easily burn out or get distracted.

Is this the beginning of the end for RIM? Maybe not now, but... Richard Windsor of Nomura, one of my favorite financial analysts covering the mobile market, just issued a scathing recommendation to sell RIM stock.
"In order to see further upside we think RIM needs to ship around 1m Pearl devices per quarter to consumers outside of its traditional channels. We have seen no sign of these shipments."

Basically, he's arguing that RIM's dominance in the business communicator market has already been factored into the stock's value, and that to see a lot of upside it has to grow substantially in the consumer market.

I'm not as pessimistic about Pearl shipments as he is -- the early word in the industry was that Pearl was selling extremely well, although it's almost impossible to get reliable figures on phone sales. But I think he's right directionally, even though it's for the wrong reasons. The real question for RIM isn't whether it can break into the "consumer" communicator market, because there's no such thing. There are just communication users, and they use the same devices for both work and personal use. Those people make up about 12% of the population. At some point, between sales of RIM and Treo and all the copycat communicators coming to market, that segment's going to saturate, and RIM's growth will come to an abrupt halt.

The trick is predicting when it'll happen. I don't have enough data to make that call. If anyone wants to invest about $50k in some quantitative research, I could find out. ;-)

Think more creatively about new forms of telephony. Dean Bubley wrote a nice article on possible future uses of voice technology. His point, which I agree with strongly, is that we're paying too much attention to VOIP as a replacement for conventional phone calls. It's important, for sure, but the most interesting change in voice communication is likely to be the integration of voice conversations into lots of different web services. Talking will just be one of the things you do on web sites and online communities. You won't think of it as a phone call, but it'll displace traditional calls as surely as that Vonage handset on somebody's desk. The only difference is, most of the industry won't see it coming.

As they used to say in war movies, "the bullet you don't hear is the one that gets you."

After the death of the album. The mainstream media seems to be finally waking up to the main impact of the iTunes -- it enables people to buy singles instead of albums. That's a financial disaster for the record companies, because they can no longer force people to pay $14 to get the one or two songs they actually want. But I can't see how it is anything but good news for consumers.

Please excuse me if this sounds like bragging, but this trend is what I predicted last year when I looked in detail at the economics of music distribution on the Internet. In that spirit, here's what the newspapers will be reporting in another year or two: more and more new acts will be bypassing the record companies and using iTunes as their music publisher. This will let them keep about 65% of their revenue, rather than under 15%, enabling them to make reasonable money on a relatively small fan base. I believe Apple's fate is to become the music publisher of choice in the US, but the iPod installed base has to grow some more before it'll happen.

Nokia to set up a mobile device factory in Romania

Nokia will set up a manufacturing facility for mobile devices in the county of Cluj in Romania. The company will invest an estimated EUR 60 million in the Cluj plant, which will be the company's 11th mobile device production facility globally. Nokia has decided to come up with the new factory in Romania to meet the increasing demand for mobile devices in Europe, the Middle East and Africa. Nokia

Sony Ericsson: Expect More From Us

ORLANDO – Sony Ericsson will be expanding its cell phone line in the US with the company's "largest set of devices for North America ever," Sony Ericsson president Miles Flint said at the CTIA trade show today.

Sony Ericsson K550 vs Nokia 6300 pics

The K550 is SE's second Cyber-shot phone and little brother to the K800. It has lower specifications than the K800. The Nokia is targeted at the same audience as the K550 but it has some advantages over the K550. I personally like the look of the K550 more.

LG Google phone?

LG Electronics and Google Team Up to Enhance the Mobile Experience. LG Electronics (LG), a leading worldwide provider of advanced wireless handsets and accessories, and Google today announced a global collaboration to pre-install Google’s services on millions of LG mobile phones. Mobile users around the world will now be able to easily search for information, find locations, update blogs and

10-Function Professional calendar counter for FREE

Accurately count days or search dates in seconds. 10-Function Professional calendar counting! Works on almost ALL java-enabled mobile phones/PDAs. Please see the extensive help in the "Help" option of each screen to understand how to use it. It's FREE!!!Click to download

Live Nokia N76 pics

There is an interesting review over at the Chinese pconline site. If you don't know Chinese or don't feel like reading the translation then you can enjoy the pics there.Click for pconline

Live Nokia N76 pics

There is an interesting review over at the Chinese pconline site. If you don't know Chinese or don't feel like reading the translation then you can enjoy the pics there.

Sony Ericsson se123?

I find these pictures quite funny. It is quite rare that SE would present a phone with the 'se123' label which is used before a phone gets named. These pictures are from CeBit.

Sony Ericsson se123?

I find these pictures quite funny. It is quite rare that SE would present a phone with the 'se123' label which is used before a phone gets named. These pictures are from CeBit.

Sony Ericsson W580 preview

Se-community has a hands on preview of the W580. There are pics of it next to the W880. The W580 is one fine and slim slider. The more pics I see of the phone. the more I like it. There is also a video clip of the phone. Enjoy.

Good pics of Sony Ericsson's W660

I found many pictures over at se.it168. There are pictures of the black version and the new portable speakers. The floral pattern on the red version is quite special.

More internal pics of 'Elena'/M610

More pics posted by 'zopp'. From the last pic we can see that the production date is 06W33 and it's a EP1 prototype.

New Nokia N76 video

This is a very arty video of the N76 posted at Nseries Arena Blog.Click for video

More W580 live pics

Here is another picture gallery of Sony Ericsson's new W580. I have to say that this phone looks good. I am still waiting for live pics of the grey version.

Pic of 'Elena' taken apart

This picture was posted by 'zopp' to prove to the guys at esato that he indeed has the phone. I would say that this proves that he has the phone and that it's real. Stay tuned for more pics.

Pics of 'Elena' (M610) in white

Today 'zopp' posted more pics at se-nse. This time he posted pics of the white casing of the 'Elena'. The pics he posted yeterday are here.click for se-nse

Pics of 'Elena' (M610) in white

Today 'zopp' posted more pics at se-nse. This time he posted pics of the white casing of the 'Elena'.

Live pics of Sony Ericsson's W580

Live pics of the W580 at CTIA from mobileburn. Too bad there aren't any pics of the grey/blue version. I would have liked to have seen those. More pics at mobileburn.Click for mobileburn

Live pics of Sony Ericsson's W580

Live pics of the W580 at CTIA from mobileburn. Too bad there aren't any pics of the grey/blue version. I would have liked to have seen those. More pics at mobileburn.

Live pics of Sony Ericsson's Z750

The Z750 was announced yesterday by Sony Ericsson. Live pics at CTIA from mobileburn. The UI of the phone seems refreshed.Click for mobileburn

Live pics of Sony Ericsson's Z750

The Z750 was announced yesterday by Sony Ericsson. Live pics at CTIA from mobileburn. The UI of the phone seems refreshed.

LG Shine VX8700

This phone is meant for the US markets and it's design is very similar to the VX8600. It is relatively thin and nicely designed. It also features a 2 mega pixel camera. There are more pics at mobileburn's site. Click for mobileburn

LG Shine VX8700

This phone is meant for the US markets and it's design is very similar to the VX8600. It is relatively thin and nicely designed. It also features a 2 mega pixel camera. There are more pics at mobileburn's site.

Modded SE W850i

This W850 has modded flash theme/menus. This is amazing...definitely a must see.

Modded SE W850i

This W850 has modded flash theme/menus. This is amazing...definitely a must see.

Video of Sony Ericsson's W660

Video is from mobilissimo. The W660 looks really good in both colors. Enjoy the clip.

Video of Sony Ericsson's W660

Video is from mobilissimo. The W660 looks really good in both colors. Enjoy the clip.

Pics of Sony Ericsson's K220

The K220 is a low end phone from SE. It features a built in camera and FM radio. It comes with large keys and a simple user interface. It actually looks nice for a cheap phone.

Pics of Sony Ericsson's K220

The K220 is a low end phone from SE. It features a built in camera and FM radio. It comes with large keys and a simple user interface. It actually looks nice for a cheap phone.

Tons of K810 pictures

I found at a Chinese forum a thread with tons of pictures of the K810. There are also pics of the K810 next to the K800. Enjoy.Click for pics

Tons of K810 pictures

I found at a Chinese forum a thread with tons of pictures of the K810. There are also pics of the K810 next to the K800. Enjoy.

Symbian announces Symbian OS v9.5

CTIA Wireless, Orlando, USA and London, UK – 26 March 2007 – Symbian Ltd. today announced the launch of Symbian OS v9.5, the latest evolution of the world’s leading operating system for smartphones. Symbian OS v9.5 brings high performance features designed for richer consumer and enterprise experiences as well as significant savings to phone build costs and time-to-market, delivering a truly

Symbian announces Symbian OS v9.5

CTIA Wireless, Orlando, USA and London, UK – 26 March 2007 – Symbian Ltd. today announced the launch of Symbian OS v9.5, the latest evolution of the world’s leading operating system for smartphones. Symbian OS v9.5 brings high performance features designed for richer consumer and enterprise experiences as well as significant savings to phone build costs and time-to-market, delivering a truly

Sony Ericsson supports next-gen Java

CTIA WIRELESS 2007, Orlando (FL), USA, March 26, 2007 – Sony Ericsson today announced its first mobile phone to support Mobile Services Architecture (MSA), the next-generation Java™ umbrella standard (JSR-248). The Z750 clamshell phone is the first phone based on Sony Ericsson’s Java Platform 8 (JP-8), supporting a range of new Java programming features including instant messaging / chat and

Sony Ericsson supports next-gen Java

CTIA WIRELESS 2007, Orlando (FL), USA, March 26, 2007 – Sony Ericsson today announced its first mobile phone to support Mobile Services Architecture (MSA), the next-generation Java™ umbrella standard (JSR-248). The Z750 clamshell phone is the first phone based on Sony Ericsson’s Java Platform 8 (JP-8), supporting a range of new Java programming features including instant messaging / chat and

More 'Elena' pics

Wow, what a busy day. More pics posted by 'zopp' of the Sony Ericsson 'Elena' (M610?) over at se-nse. The phone looks to be as thick as the M600. He posted the first pics of this phone a few days ago.Click for se-nse UPDATE New info and pics

More 'Elena' pics

Wow, what a busy day. More pics posted by 'zopp' of the Sony Ericsson 'Elena' (M610?) over at se-nse. The phone looks to be as thick as the M600. He posted the first pics of this phone a few days ago.

More pics of the mysterious Sony Ericsson phone

More pics were posted by 'zopp' today over at se-nse of this unknown phone. This time he posted a pic of the phone turned on. He posted the first pics of this phone yesterday.Click for se-nse

More pics of the mysterious Sony Ericsson phone

More pics were posted by 'zopp' today over at se-nse of this unknown phone. This time he posted a pic of the phone turned on. He posted the first pics of this .

New Sony Ericsson Z750

The Z750 is Sony Ericsson's first triband HSDPA (850/1900/2100) and quadband EDGE (850/900/1800/1900) telephone. It's design is almost identical to the Z610. The keypad has changed plus it also includes a built in radio. The screen is larger and of higher resolution. There are also the classic send and end keys. It will be available in pink or grey. It will be bundled with a 128 mb M2 card. The

New Sony Ericsson Z750

The Z750 is Sony Ericsson's first triband HSDPA (850/1900/2100) and quadband EDGE (850/900/1800/1900) telephone. It's design is almost identical to the Z610. The keypad has changed plus it also includes a built in radio. The screen is larger and of higher resolution. There are also the classic send and end keys. It will be available in pink or grey. It will be bundled with a 128 mb M2 card. The

New Sony Ericsson W580

The W580 is a slider walkman phone. It features a 2 megapixel camera (which is hidden when the phone is closed), quadband, 2 inch QVGA screen and radio. It measures 99x47x14 mm and weighs only 94 grams. It is quite small and thin. Too bad it doesnt support UMTS. It comes in two colors, style white or urban grey. The phone features light effects. It will be bundled with a 512 mb M2 card. It will

New Sony Ericsson W580

The W580 is a slider walkman phone. It features a 2 megapixel camera (which is hidden when the phone is closed), quadband, 2 inch QVGA screen and radio. It measures 99x47x14 mm and weighs only 94 grams. It is quite small and thin. Too bad it doesnt support UMTS. It comes in two colors, style white or urban grey. The phone features light effects. It will be bundled with a 512 mb M2 card. It will

Review of HTC Advantage

This is the first in depth review of the HTC Advantage (X7500). It features a 5 inch vga touchscreen display, 8gb hard drive, built in GPS, 3 mega pixel camera and runs Windows Mobile. This device is very impressive. This device was reviewed by mobile-review and split into two parts.Click for part oneClick for part two

Review of HTC Advantage

This is the first in depth review of the HTC Advantage (X7500). It features a 5 inch vga touchscreen display, 8gb hard drive, built in GPS, 3 mega pixel camera and runs Windows Mobile. This device is very impressive. This device was reviewed by mobile-review and split into two parts.Click for part oneClick for part two

Nokia N95 listed as available

The N95 is now listed as available in shops at gsm-arena. This usually means that the phone is widely available to be bought in many places, both online and offline.Click for gsm-arena

Nokia black box

Symbian-freak has a recieved a black box from Nokia. This black box is a limited edition N95 package. Guess whats inside? =) (hint: greatpockets)Click for symbian-freak

Sony Ericsson and Sagem to cooperate

Sony Ericsson and Sagem Communication enter into licensing and ODM agreements regarding mobile phones. Click for press release

Sony Ericsson and Sagem to cooperate

Sony Ericsson and Sagem Communication enter into licensing and ODM agreements regarding mobile phones.

More pics from N95's camera

Steve over at allaboutsymbian has posted more pics from N95's cam and a video clip. The pictures are quite good i must admit. I hope Sony Ericsson announces a 5 mega pixel cam phone soon.Click for allaboutsymbian

Nokia E62 review

The Nokia E62 is a business phone available through Cingular.The E62 lacks both the 3G UMTS and Wi-Fi of its predecessor, the E61. I have used the E61 in the past. The keyboard was a pleasure to use and the screen was fantastic. I was disappointed that it didn't have a camera. I also found the phone a bit to wide. Phonearena has recently reviewed the E62.Click for review

Nokia E62 review

The Nokia E62 is a business phone available through Cingular.The E62 lacks both the 3G UMTS and Wi-Fi of its predecessor, the E61. I have used the E61 in the past. The keyboard was a pleasure to use and the screen was fantastic. I was disappointed that it didn't have a camera. I also found the phone a bit to wide. Phonearena has recently reviewed the E62.

Sony Ericsson's W810 with walkman 2.0?

In response to the K800 pics with walkman 2.0 pics, 'awtroop' from esato created the above pics. He was just trying to prove how easy it is to fake these pictures. I personally find the K800 pics more real than these ones though...Click for esato

Sony Ericsson's W810 with walkman 2.0?

In response to the K800 pics with walkman 2.0 pics, 'awtroop' from esato created the above pics. He was just trying to prove how easy it is to fake these pictures. I personally find the K800 pics more real than these ones though...

More real pics of Sony Ericsson's K810

Excellent photos of the K810i. More at 'xumdeo's photo album at flickr.Click for picsClick for review

More real pics of Sony Ericsson's K810

Excellent photos of the K810i. More at 'xumdeo's photo album at flickr.

More pics of Sony Ericsson's W660

More pics of the stylish W660 thanks to sogi.com.tw. There are also pics of the black version.Click for sogi

More pics of Sony Ericsson's W660

More pics of the stylish W660 thanks to sogi.com.tw. There are also pics of the black version.

The slimmest Motorola ever

Motofone’s design follows the latest fashion trends. Certainly nobody had expected the cheapest phone on the market to be only 9 mm thin and thus being the slimmest Motorola ever. Gsmarena has posted a review of the Motofone F3.Click for review

MOTORIZR Z8

Kick start your day with the new MOTORIZR Z8. Reinventing the slider phone, the MOTORIZR Z8 brings multimedia, speed, pleasure and mobile broadband¹ to your fingertips. Providing you with the ultimate in entertainment, the MOTORIZR Z8 allows you to watch crystal clear video at 30 frames per second through a large QVGA 16m TFT display. The device also supports optional expandable memory up to

Unboxing of pink Nokia N95

Mobile Diva Darla Mack has received a pink N95 from Nokia. She has posted pics and a video in her blog. Enjoy.Click for Darla's blog

First Nokia N76 TV ad

This is the first promotional video of Nokia's N76. It is simple with pleasant background music. I like the video. Check it out at nseriesarena.Click for nseriesarena

First Nokia N76 TV ad

This is the first promotional video of Nokia's N76. It is simple with pleasant background music. I like the video. Check it out at nseriesarena.

Pics of new Motorola LAZR

These surfaced today of a new Motorola phone at bengalboy's site. It is labelled LAZR and features half a gig of internal memory but no external support, 2 inch external screen and powered by Linux.Click for bengalboy

Pics of new Motorola LAZR

These surfaced today of a new Motorola phone at bengalboy's site. It is labelled LAZR and features half a gig of internal memory but no external support, 2 inch external screen and powered by Linux.

More pics of an unknown Sony Ericsson phone

More pics posted today by 'zoop' at se-nse. He says he has no idea what phone this is. I am guessing that this phone is a low end phone, possibly a k 3xx series. He has been posting alot of pics the last few days. Hope he will be posting more. Maybe Sony Ericsson is announcing new phones very soon.Click for se-nse

More pics of an unknown Sony Ericsson phone

More pics posted today by 'zoop' at se-nse. He says he has no idea what phone this is. I am guessing that this phone is a low end phone, possibly a k 3xx series. He has been posting alot of pics the last few days. Hope he will be posting more. Maybe Sony Ericsson is announcing new phones very soon.

Walkman 2.0 on K800

This was posted on a Chinese forum. If this is true, I would like to also have it on my K800. If you know Chinese then there is more info at the site.Click to visit

Walkman 2.0 on K800

This was posted on a Chinese forum. If this is true, I would like to also have it on my K800. If you know Chinese then there is more info at the site.

Another pic of Sony Ericsson's M610

Another pic posted by 'zopp' at se-nse. Yesterday he posted pics of the M610 prototype on se-nse. He says his phone doesnt work and only displays this when turned on. Well we can see it is dated a while back and we can clearly see 'Elena'. Hope he will provide more pics or info.Click for se-nse

Another pic of Sony Ericsson's M610

Another pic posted by 'zopp' at se-nse. Yesterday he posted pics of the M610 prototype on se-nse. He says his phone doesnt work and only displays this when turned on. Well we can see it is dated a while back and we can clearly see 'Elena'. Hope he will provide more pics or info.Click for se-nse

Symbian OS 9.5

CTIA Wireless, Orlando, USA and London, UK – 26 March 2007 – Symbian Ltd. today announced Symbian OS v9.5, the latest evolution of the world’s leading operating system for smartphones. Symbian OS v9.5 brings high performance features designed for richer consumer and enterprise experiences as well as significant savings to phone build costs and time to market, delivering a truly scalable

Symbian OS 9.5

CTIA Wireless, Orlando, USA and London, UK – 26 March 2007 – Symbian Ltd. today announced Symbian OS v9.5, the latest evolution of the world’s leading operating system for smartphones. Symbian OS v9.5 brings high performance features designed for richer consumer and enterprise experiences as well as significant savings to phone build costs and time to market, delivering a truly scalable

Pics from N95's camera

If you are interested in the performance of the N95, then this page is worth a visit. These have got to be the best pics I have seen so far from N95's camera.Click to visit

What does "I don't have time to try this" really mean?

A few days ago I was reading Will Richardson's post The Next Generation of Teachers on how often "yeah, but" excuses can be heard from young, still to-be teachers when it comes to the usage of educational technologies. I think this isn't common just among educators (young or old), but it's something we often have to deal with when presenting a new technology/service/tool to somebody. One of the very popular excuses in these cases sounds something like this: "Yeah, it sounds great, BUT I don't have time to try this right now". How often did you heard that reply? From colleagues, friends, family that you were just trying to help by presenting this really amazing new tool that you find soooo useful and is making part of your life easier, more enjoyable or more efficient. Sure, sometimes we just are too busy to even know our own name, but I often get the feeling that not-having-enough-time is just a handy excuse to avoid the usage of a new tool. Being busy is always an acceptable way out, right?
So, I often wonder what "I don't have time to try this" really means - especially when the presented tool isn't so demanding that it would require weeks of intensive training, but perhaps just an hour of a person's time, and especially when the tool at hand is really intended to save time (for example RSS feeds). Let me share with you three (in my opinion and experience) of the most popular hidden meanings of not-having-enough-time and some ideas on how to avoid getting the "I don't have time" excuse or on how to deal with it:

When I say that I don't have time to try the tool you're presenting, I in fact...

... don't understand why I should use this tool.
Translation: The person you are talking to doesn't see a personal benefit in using the tool you're presenting; therefore he/she sees the tool as a waste of his/her time.

Possible solutions: When trying to get somebody hooked up on a new tool because you just know he/she could greatly benefit from it, use some empathy. Get to know the person, his/her needs, problems with similar existing solutions and use that knowledge during your presentation. Show the features that are relevant to the person you're presenting to. (example: If somebody presented Second Life to me as just a new game, I wouldn't be interested in checking it out - instead I decided to join because I read articles and personal reports from educators about how SL can be used for education.) When presenting listen to small clues (often hidden in questions) that might show that you're not presenting the tool in a relevant way.


... think I understand what this tool is about, but it seems so hard to use.
Translation: The person can see some of the benefits of the tool you're presenting, but to him/her the tool just seems too difficult to use; he/she thinks he/she doesn't have the appropriate skills to be able to use it or that getting to know the tool would require a lot of training - therefore a lot more time the person is willing to dedicate to get the benefits of the tool.

Possible solutions: When presenting the tool also present the steps required to get started with the tool. Show the person simple (and if possible support) tutorials that can be used for beginners. If possible offer personal tutoring and support for the initial steps (example: "I'll help you create an account on Flickr and we'll upload your picture together"), but try to make the person comfortable in using the tool on his/her own or you might get called each time the person will need the tool ;) (example: "See, it's easy. Now you can try this on your own. I'll help you if needed.")


... don't want to change the way I'm doing things at the moment!
Translation: The person is most bothered by the change the new tool might cause in his/her life. One of the fears might also be that the new tool will demand more of a person's attention; therefore it seems easier to say one doesn't have time to try doing things another way. Why change if the way I'm doing things works just fine?

Possible solutions: This case is perhaps the most difficult to solve. You might be dealing with a person that just doesn't like change - period. In some cases resistance to change might be a symptom of insecurities. In this case you could always try to present the tool in a relevant way and offer your help (just as described above), but that might not always work. In these cases it is perhaps better to retreat. After all, not every exciting new tool is meant to be accepted by everyone. But if the time comes when the tool you failed to present successfully becomes so popular that it can't be avoided anymore, you can always come back to the person and use the strategies presented above to help the person make the change.



In my opinion the keywords when dealing with new tools are relevance and support. Try to find what the person really needs and shape your presentation according to the person's needs. We aren't very good at changing our habits because somebody tells us to, but we are willing and capable of great change when we decide the change is needed and know exactly how to make it happen.

Finally, I would really like to hear your opinion on the not-having-enough-time excuse. How do you deal with it when you can tell it's just an excuse with a hidden meaning? What are in your opinion other common hidden meanings of this excuse? And what do you do to help people find the time to try something new?

Sony Ericsson to route phone calls through your TV

Sony Ericsson has filed a patent application for a Wireless home communication system method and apparatus. The patent, published last week, details how the device would route phone calls through your home television set in a similar way to an in car handsfree kit. There is more info at mad4mobilephones site.Click for mad4mobilephones

Sony Ericsson to route phone calls through your TV

Sony Ericsson has filed a patent application for a Wireless home communication system method and apparatus. The patent, published last week, details how the device would route phone calls through your home television set in a similar way to an in car handsfree kit. There is more info at mad4mobilephones site.

New pics of Sony Ericsson's M610?

New pics surfaced today of a new SE device. This is getting confusing already. Is this the M610, 'Elena', 'Lizzy' or 'Maria? From the pics we can see that it has a 3.2 mega pixel camera with 2 leds. The pictures were posted by 'zopp' at se-nse.Click for se-nse

New pics of Sony Ericsson's M610?

New pics surfaced today of a new SE device. This is getting confusing already. Is this the M610, 'Elena', 'Lizzy' or 'Maria? From the pics we can see that it has a 3.2 mega pixel camera with 2 leds. The pictures were posted by 'zopp' at se-nse.

More pics of Hi-Tech Wealth's solar-powered S116

Yet more pics on the solar powered phone , thanks to engadget.Click for engadget

More pics of Hi-Tech Wealth's solar-powered S116

Yet more pics on the solar powered phone , thanks to engadget.Click for engadget

Real pic of solar powered phone

Yesterday I posted about this solar powered phone by HTW. I found this pic of the phone exhibited at CeBit. This company had a stand there. I found this pic at trustedreviews.Click for trustedreviews

Real pic of solar powered phone

Yesterday I posted about this solar powered phone by HTW. I found this pic of the phone exhibited at CeBit. This company had a stand there. I found this pic at trustedreviews.Click for trustedreviews

Nokia E90 also available in grey

We all know that the E90 will be available in black and red. Pictures from i-symbian have surfaced revealing that it will be available in grey also. More info and pics on i-symbian's site.Click for i-symbian

Nokia E90 also available in grey

We all know that the E90 will be available in black and red. Pictures from i-symbian have surfaced revealing that it will be available in grey also. More info and pics on i-symbian's site.

Sony Ericsson's Second Life CeBit presence

Here SE presents their products in a virtual booth. For those that couldn't visit SE's booth at CeBit, I guess this is the best alternative.

Sony Ericsson's Second Life CeBit presence

Here SE presents their products in a virtual booth. For those that couldn't visit SE's booth at CeBit, I guess this is the best alternative.

PS3 launched in Europe

The PS3 was launched today in Europe and Australia finally after a long delay. At the London launch people were rewarded free taxi rides home and a 46 inch HDTV. It was certainly worth waiting in line in London to buy the PS3. The launches were crime free unlike the U.S..Click for bbc

PS3 launched in Europe

The PS3 was launched today in Europe and Australia finally after a long delay. At the London launch people were rewarded free taxi rides home and a 46 inch HDTV. It was certainly worth waiting in line in London to buy the PS3. The launches were crime free unlike the U.S..

Seven Companies That Aren't Rumored to be Buying Palm, But Really Should Be

This afternoon I heard from a reporter that Google and Microsoft are now rumored to be interested in buying Palm. I have no idea who starts these rumors, or whether there's any truth to them, but they're not nearly creative enough. Here's my list of other companies that have absolutely no interest in buying Palm, but ought to be in the rumor mill anyway. Feel free to re-use these if you want to manipulate the stock market. No need to credit me; I don't want to be visited by the Feds.


7. Airbus

Compelling business rationale. I hear Airbus has a lot of trouble with the wiring in the A380, and there's a bunch of wires and stuff inside a Treo, so this seems like a good match. (Hey, it makes as much sense as Google buying Palm.)


6. eBay

Compelling business rationale. Most Treos end up on eBay eventually, after their owners upgrade to a new model, so this is an opportunity to "significantly integrate the value chain," as we say in the business. Each Treo could come with an eBay account, enabling the user to offer it for sale whenever they're ready.

As an added benefit, a Skype client could be bundled with every Treo sold. (By the way, this is apparently the only way to get Skype to port its full native client to Palm OS.)


5. Ben & Jerry's

Compelling business rationale. What if Jeff Hawkins designed ice cream flavors?




4. Cisco

Compelling business rationale. Apparently not required for a Cisco acquisition.


3. DaimlerChrysler

Compelling business rationale. I propose a straight-up equity swap: Palm for Chrysler. Daimler would give away a company that's talented at design, but whose products have fallen behind the innovation curve, and that has problems with execution. In exchange, it would get...exactly the same thing. But as a bonus, Daimler could build a Treo and sync cradle into every car it sells. This fits with the whole convergence thing that's supposedly driving all industrial development in the western world, so this merger is a natural.


2. HP

Compelling business rationale. No, wait, this one actually makes sense. Never mind.


1. JetBlue

Compelling business rationale. Give a Tungsten to every employee, pre-loaded with a datebook alarm that says, "Time for the airplane to leave now." The acquisition would pay for itself within three months.

Nokia N99?

The first pic surfaced about 2 months ago. The second pic shows a recent patent filing from Nokia. Is there any truth in the first pic? The claimed specs of the N99 are 9 way front joystick button, 16GB FLASH internal memory, up to 4GB mini SD slot, 16:9 3.2″ wide screen, GPS, MP3, DIVX XVID MPEG AVI video reading, WLAN WIFI, qwerty pad, 8MP camera, 3CCD 720 pixel wide 30fps video capture. There

Nokia N99?

The first pic surfaced about 2 months ago. The second pic shows a recent patent filing from Nokia. Is there any truth in the first pic? The claimed specs of the N99 are 9 way front joystick button, 16GB FLASH internal memory, up to 4GB mini SD slot, 16:9 3.2″ wide screen, GPS, MP3, DIVX XVID MPEG AVI video reading, WLAN WIFI, qwerty pad, 8MP camera, 3CCD 720 pixel wide 30fps video capture. There

Sony Ericsson M610

Deuxani does it again. I am impressed with his vision of the M610. His previous work on the K850 was also impressive. The M610 looks absolutely stunning.

Sony Ericsson M610

Deuxani does it again. I am impressed with his vision of the M610. His previous work on the K850 was also impressive. The M610 looks absolutely stunning.

CeBit is over

Well, CeBit is over and nothing exciting was announced from Sony Ericsson or Nokia. At least Sony Ericsson announced the W660, Cyber-shot accessories and portable speakers. The next show that might be of interest is the CTIA Wireless show which takes place in Orlando, Florida. Sony Ericsson is supposed to announce something there. =)

CeBit is over

Well, CeBit is over and nothing exciting was announced from Sony Ericsson or Nokia. At least Sony Ericsson announced the W660, Cyber-shot accessories and portable speakers. The next show that might be of interest is the CTIA Wireless show which takes place in Orlando, Florida. Sony Ericsson is supposed to announce something there. =)

Smoker's phone

This is the ultimate phone for smokers. It looks exactly like a pack of cigarettes. Flip the top open and there are real cigarettes inside. It's dual band, has a color screen, VGA camera, supports micro SD cards and has a color screen. It is available in China. More info and pics available at gearfuse.Click to visit

Solar powered phone

HTW has introduced a mobile phone that can be recharged by solar power. It measures 47.6x80x0.8 mm the phone is equipped with a QVGA screen, an expansion slot and a 1.3-megapixel camera. 40 minutes under the sun enables 20-25 minutes of talk time. The phone will be named S116.

Solar powered phone

HTW has introduced a mobile phone that can be recharged by solar power. It measures 47.6x80x0.8 mm the phone is equipped with a QVGA screen, an expansion slot and a 1.3-megapixel camera. 40 minutes under the sun enables 20-25 minutes of talk time. The phone will be named S116.

Unboxing of retail N95

This is it people. The final production/retail N95. It is packaged a bit differently from other N series phones. Allaboutsymbian has recieved a retail N95 and has published it's unboxing. Enjoy.Click for unboxing

Nokia N95 multimedia computer starts shipping

Espoo, Finland - Nokia today announced that the Nokia N95 started shipping in key European, Asian and Middle Eastern markets, with expanded shipments to other markets in those regions in the coming weeks. This info is from Nokia's press release.Click for press release

Pic of cancelled Sony Ericsson Slider

A member from Esato under the name 'Xumdeo' has been really generous and posted a pic of a cancelled Sony Ericsson slider. This phone was meant for Japan.Click for esato

Pic of cancelled Sony Ericsson Slider

A member from Esato under the name 'Xumdeo' has been really generous and posted a pic of a cancelled Sony Ericsson slider. This phone was meant for Japan.

Nokia N95 support pages online

The pages are online and ready at Nokia's support pages. This probably means the phone is really shipping very soon. That's good news.Click for Nokia

Nokia N95 vs HTC Artemis

N95 is Nokia's flagship smartphone. HTC Atermis is an advanced smartphone with Windows Mobile 5. They have many things in common. My-symbian has a comprehensive comparison.Click for comparison

More insider info on Nokia's N81?

Someone commenting on ringnokia claims to have seen the N81 and has provided some info. You decide whether it's credible or not.Click for ringnokia

More insider info on Nokia's N81?

Someone commenting on ringnokia claims to have seen the N81 and has provided some info. You decide whether it's credible or not.

N93 vs N93i lowlight conditions

Yesterday, Symbian freak published a comparison between the N93 and N93i. Today they updated the comparison with low light conditions. Click for comparison

Live pics of HTC's Kaiser

These pics are from a Taiwanese site. This smartphone will feature a 3 mega pixel camera, HSDPA, HSUPA, 3G, GPS and powered by Windows Mobile 6. Nice pics of the device, especially the one showing how screen tilted. More pics are on the Taiwanese site.Click for site

Live pics of HTC's Kaiser

These pics are from a Taiwanese site. This smartphone will feature a 3 mega pixel camera, HSDPA, HSUPA, 3G, GPS and powered by Windows Mobile 6. Nice pics of the device, especially the one showing how screen tilted. More pics are on the Taiwanese site.Click for site

Samsung's Helio Heat

Samsung's Helio Heat is quite impressive. It has touch-sensitive controls and an extremely low price. The new model features bluetooth, 136MB of internal memory (no external support), 1.3 mega pixel cam, Helio Music compatibility and the full suite of GPS stuff including Google Maps and Helio's "Buddy Beacon" service on its 2-inch QVGA display. Mobileburn has an excellent review.Click for

Samsung's Helio Heat

Samsung's Helio Heat is quite impressive. It has touch-sensitive controls and an extremely low price. The new model features bluetooth, 136MB of internal memory (no external support), 1.3 mega pixel cam, Helio Music compatibility and the full suite of GPS stuff including Google Maps and Helio's "Buddy Beacon" service on its 2-inch QVGA display. Mobileburn has an excellent review.Click for

Samsung's x520

“The SGH-X520 is a combination of a very sophisticated design and irresistible trims…”, says Samsung. The phone is available in five different trims: light-green, red, pink and violet. It's measurements are 89x42x17.7 mm and weighs 78 grams. It has an unusual design. This model is focused on design hence not being impressive in specs. It looks good and is quite cheap also. Mobile-review

Samsung's x520

“The SGH-X520 is a combination of a very sophisticated design and irresistible trims…”, says Samsung. The phone is available in five different trims: light-green, red, pink and violet. It's measurements are 89x42x17.7 mm and weighs 78 grams. It has an unusual design. This model is focused on design hence not being impressive in specs. It looks good and is quite cheap also. Mobile-review

First IRC client for Symbian S60 3rd edition

mIRGGI is the first IRC client for S60 3rd Edition devices. It is currently in early stages. It is a totally free program.Click for mIRGGI siteClick to download

First IRC client for Symbian S60 3rd edition

mIRGGI is the first IRC client for S60 3rd Edition devices. It is currently in early stages. It is a totally free program.Click for mIRGGI siteClick to download

Nokia N73 clone

This clone of the N73 is called the 'Nokir 828'. It looks almost the same as the N73. It features a 2 mega pixel camera and a 2.6 inch touchscreen. I am sure you have guessed that this clone originated from China. This clone costs only 100$. Nokia is suing every single shop in Hong Kong that is selling this phone.

Nokia N73 clone

This clone of the N73 is called the 'Nokir 828'. It looks almost the same as the N73. It features a 2 mega pixel camera and a 2.6 inch touchscreen. I am sure you have guessed that this clone originated from China. This clone costs only 100$. Nokia is suing every single shop in Hong Kong that is selling this phone.

LG KS20 full touchscreen phone

This is very similar to the LG Prada due to the fact it is a full touchscreen phone. This phone is also not very publicised and listed at very few sites. I stumbled upon it at phonearena. It is a windows mobile smartphone. It is triband phone with UMTS support. It has a 2.8 inch touchscreen with a resolution of 240x320. It features a 2 mega pixel camera, wifi and tv-out. Looks and sounds

LG KS20 full touchscreen phone

This is very similar to the LG Prada due to the fact it is a full touchscreen phone. This phone is also not very publicised and listed at very few sites. I stumbled upon it at phonearena. It is a windows mobile smartphone. It is triband phone with UMTS support. It has a 2.8 inch touchscreen with a resolution of 240x320. It features a 2 mega pixel camera, wifi and tv-out. Looks and sounds good.

MyStrands for Symbian S60 3rd edition

Powerful music tool for the mobile:- Browse and play your music by track, artist, album and playlist.- Get recommendations for great music.- Link to our extensive mobile web site for detailed information.- Find out who's playing your music now. Find out what other music they're listening to. Add them as a friend.- Discover new music through your friends.Check out the videoClick to download

MyStrands for Symbian S60 3rd edition

Powerful music tool for the mobile:- Browse and play your music by track, artist, album and playlist.- Get recommendations for great music.- Link to our extensive mobile web site for detailed information.- Find out who's playing your music now. Find out what other music they're listening to. Add them as a friend.- Discover new music through your friends.Check out the videoClick to download

Sony Ericsson W820i?

Someone has posted results for a Sony Ericsson W820i over at jbenchmark. Is it a new phone or just a typo?Click for jbenchmark

Sony Ericsson W820i?

Someone has posted results for a Sony Ericsson W820i over at jbenchmark. Is it a new phone or just a typo?

Smartphones and Handhelds Roundup (March Update)

I've updated the latest in PDAs/Smartphones roundup here. Nothing groundbreaking, same old stuff with a few new colors introduced. Didn't realize Verizon Wireless now has a clam-shell Windows-powered smartphone PN-820. Too bad it doesn't have built-in Wi-Fi.

Nokia N77 preview

The Nokia N77 was announced at 3GSM in Barcelona. It is Nokia's second DVB-H phone. It is a candy bar and very similar in design to the N73. Allaboutsymbian has a hands on preview of the phone. Enjoy.Click for preview

Nokia N77 preview

The Nokia N77 was announced at 3GSM in Barcelona. It is Nokia's second DVB-H phone. It is a candy bar and very similar in design to the N73. Allaboutsymbian has a hands on preview of the phone. Enjoy.

Nokia N93 vs N93i

The N93 is Nokia's flagship camera/video phone. The N93i is the continuation by improving in size and looks. I personally like the N93i more. The N93 looks big, clumsy and clunky. Spec wise, they are the same. Symbian-freak has compared the two phones head to head.Click for comparison

Nokia N93 vs N93i

The N93 is Nokia's flagship camera/video phone. The N93i is the continuation by improving in size and looks. I personally like the N93i more. The N93 looks big, clumsy and clunky. Spec wise, they are the same. Symbian-freak has compared the two phones head to head.

Google phone?

There has been for quite a while, rumor of a Google phone. It has also been 'kinda' confirmed by Google themselves. This is the latest pic that has popped up on the net. I anxiously await for more info.

Google phone?

There has been for quite a while, rumor of a Google phone. It has also been 'kinda' confirmed by Google themselves. This is the latest pic that has popped up on the net. I anxiously await for more info.

Nokia 7088

This is the rumored Nokia 7088. It is a slider CDMA phone. Leather is used in it's construction so this might be a 'L'amour" phone. It has recently popped up at the American FCC site. I think that this will be a low end phone.

Nokia 7088

This is the rumored Nokia 7088. It is a slider CDMA phone. Leather is used in it's construction so this might be a 'L'amour" phone. It has recently popped up at the American FCC site. I think that this will be a low end phone.

LG Prada unboxed

This video is by T3.co.uk

New call filter app for UIQ 3 phones

Anfy Mobile Call Filter is a utility application made with the concept “Simple Yet Efficient” for your UIQ 3.x devices. It allows you to hang-up any incoming calls from contacts selected as a filter rule in the main application screen. The best feature of this program is that it's totally FREE.Click to download

New call filter app for UIQ 3 phones

Anfy Mobile Call Filter is a utility application made with the concept “Simple Yet Efficient” for your UIQ 3.x devices. It allows you to hang-up any incoming calls from contacts selected as a filter rule in the main application screen. The best feature of this program is that it's totally FREE.Click to download

iPhone pic

This is just a pic that has been circulating the net lately. This cardboard made replica seems quite big or maybe the guy just has small hands.

iPhone pic

This is just a pic that has been circulating the net lately. This cardboard made replica seems quite big or maybe the guy just has small hands.

iPhone from China

This is from some manufacturer in China. I like the fact that it looks quite small and thin. It is also pretty cheap. It cracks me up how they altered the Apple logo. I am sure we will see alot of iPhone copycats in the future.

iPhone from China

This is from some manufacturer in China. I like the fact that it looks quite small and thin. It is also pretty cheap. It cracks me up how they altered the Apple logo. I am sure we will see alot of iPhone copycats in the future.

The first Nokia N95 TV commercial

This was found over at a Chinese site (6rooms) like YouTube.Click for 6rooms

Flash SMS for S60 3rd Edition phones

SmsOne by Zidian Workshop allows the sending of flash SMS messages. A flash SMS is a message that shows up automatically on the recipient's screen. Click to try

Flash SMS for S60 3rd Edition phones

SmsOne by Zidian Workshop allows the sending of flash SMS messages. A flash SMS is a message that shows up automatically on the recipient's screen. Click to try

Gucci mobile phone

Not much is known about this phone. Only a couple of pics like the one above are available. Perhaps Gucci wants to battle the LG Prada. I wonder what the specs will be and which manufacturer will partner with Gucci.

Gucci mobile phone

Not much is known about this phone. Only a couple of pics like the one above are available. Perhaps Gucci wants to battle the LG Prada. I wonder what the specs will be and which manufacturer will partner with Gucci.

LG Prada

This is one heck of a phone. One of the first phones with only a touchscreen. Same idea as Apple's iPhone. I really like how the phone looks. It is supposed to be available in about 2 weeks. It also won't be cheap.

LG Prada

This is one heck of a phone. One of the first phones with only a touchscreen. Same idea as Apple's iPhone. I really like how the phone looks. It is supposed to be available in about 2 weeks. It also won't be cheap.

Mobile phone for the elderly

Emporia's phone is designed specially for elderly people. It features extra large buttons, extra powerful speaker phone and an extremely simple user interface. This is the phone my grandma has always been looking for.

Mobile phone for the elderly

Emporia's phone is designed specially for elderly people. It features extra large buttons, extra powerful speaker phone and an extremely simple user interface. This is the phone my grandma has always been looking for.

First legit Nokia N95 on Ebay?

This seller under the alias of 'digimaster06' claims to have retail N95's ready to ship. The price is almost 900$. What do you think?Click for ebay

First legit Nokia N95 on Ebay?

This seller under the alias of 'digimaster06' claims to have retail N95's ready to ship. The price is almost 900$. What do you think?Click for ebay

Samsung's Symbian i520

Samsung isn't so well known for Symbian powered mobile phones. It is a S60, 3G slider phone. It features a 2 mega pixel camera with no leds or auto focus. It's dimensions are 101.7x50.5x17.9 mm and weighs 99 grams. Mobile -review has reviewed the phone.Click for review

Samsung's Symbian i520

Samsung isn't so well known for Symbian powered mobile phones. It is a S60, 3G slider phone. It features a 2 mega pixel camera with no leds or auto focus. It's dimensions are 101.7x50.5x17.9 mm and weighs 99 grams. Mobile -review has reviewed the phone.Click for review

Sony Ericsson to unveil music store

Sony Ericsson hints that they will be opening an online music store. There are no more details at the moment but there probably will be in a few months.

Sony Ericsson to unveil music store

Sony Ericsson hints that they will be opening an online music store. There are no more details at the moment but there probably will be in a few months.

How to really piss off a college basketball fan

One of the stranger rituals of American sports is the country's affection for the annual college basketball championship tournament. Why this country is so obsessive about college basketball and football, when every other college sport is completely ignored, is a mystery that the nation's greatest sociologists and standup comedians have never been able to explain.

But there it is. If your alma mater's basketball team is participating in "March Madness," as we call it, it's mandatory to watch the games on TV. Unless, of course, you have to take your son to a futsal game.

Futsal is a separate story in itself, basically the bastard spawn of soccer (what the rest of the world calls football) and basketball. In the US it's about a million times more obscure than college basketball, but my son likes it and his team had a game scheduled for the exact same time as my college was playing in the tournament. So I did the dad thing and drove him to the game.

But I also did the Silicon Valley dad thing and took my notebook computer with me. The high school where the game was played has a fully open WiFi network, and I had registered to receive a live streaming video feed of the basketball tournament from the CBS television network. Finally, a practical use for Web video!

So I sat down in the gymnasium, started up my notebook, logged into the network, went to the CBS website, and selected my team's game. Excitement building, I clicked on "Watch now," waited a few seconds for the feed to buffer, and...



In case you can't read it, the message said I was "prevented from accessing this game due to local blackout restrictions."

Bastards!

Here is the deal, CBS. If I had access to a TV, do you think I'd be trying to watch your crummy, pixelated, low-res, business card sized video feed? The only people interested in watching online video of a sports event are those who have no access to a television. There is absolutely zero chance of cannibalization of the TV station's audience.

Besides, think about it for a minute. Who are the people most likely to want to watch that feed? People in the school's home town who can't get to a TV. But that's exactly where the game is certain to be blacked out. So CBS has created an incredibly elaborate system to systematically tease and frustrate its most enthusiastic customers. You can't see the game you really care about, but you're welcome to watch the games that are meaningless to you.

The word for this, folks, is "perverse."

I know why CBS did the blackout. Its contracts with local broadcast stations prohibit it from streaming games they're airing. CBS had the same problem with last year's tournament -- meaning they have had more than a year to fix this thing, and failed to do so. Instead, CBS and its local stations are once again missing a great chance to build customer loyalty and develop a nice online business.

I did try out an interesting feature that CBS allowed me to access, called a "glog" (I guess that stands for game blog). It's basically written commentary on the game, streamed live. Unfortunately, if you look closely at the first and last comments below, you'll see that the commentary got caught in a loop and repeated endlessly. I was confused when the teams started running the same plays over and over.



This mess is typical of the foolishness that often happens when old line companies try to deal with the Internet. They spend millions setting up an elaborate technological tour de force but neglect to take care of the basics, like letting fans actually watch the games they want to see, and making sure all the features work.

The lesson: The product you deliver through a website isn't a bunch of HTML and Java code, it's a solution to the problem of a user. Unless all of the elements of that solution line up properly, your product is a failure.

I know CBS's online coverage isn't a total waste; some people do get to some games they want. But if you'd like a taste of what CBS is doing to a lot of fans, check out this message board where fans of Georgetown University tried to figure out how to access the online feed. It's pitiful.

As for me, I was reduced to watching the scoreboard thing you see below, and waiting for it to refresh every 15 seconds or so.



A hundred and sixty years of telecommunication progress, and I'm reduced to watching a basketball game by telegraph.

PS: My son's team lost, although he did score a booming goal from beyond halfcourt. He's always wanted to do that.

Pantech's new slim slider

It will be introduced next month. It will be only 9.9mm thick, making it one of the slimmest slider phones. The opening mechanism uses magnetic fields. The phone features a 1.3 megapixel, mp3 player and supports T-DMB.Click to visit

Pantech's new slim slider

It will be introduced next month. It will be only 9.9mm thick, making it one of the slimmest slider phones. The opening mechanism uses magnetic fields. The phone features a 1.3 megapixel, mp3 player and supports T-DMB.Click to visit

Pantech's new slim slider

It will be introduced next month. It will be only 9.9mm thick, making it one of the slimmest slider phones. The opening mechanism uses magnetic fields. The phone features a 1.3 megapixel, mp3 player and supports T-DMB.Click to visit

Hints of N81 at Nokia's site

N81 is listed under a list of supported devices . Is it a hint or a mistake or a typo?Click to visit

Hints of N81 at Nokia's site

N81 is listed under a list of supported devices . Is it a hint or a mistake or a typo?Click to visit

Lonelycatgames X-plore final for Symbian mobile phones

X-plore is a file manager for Symbian phones, with wide range of functions on phone's file system. Features:View all drives / folders / files on phone in tree view *Integrated text and image viewerView file detailsEdit file attriutes (hidder, read-only, etc)Rename and delete filesCreate or edit text filesCreate foldersMulti-selectionCopy or move files and foldersSend files by Bluetooth or

Lonelycatgames X-plore final for Symbian mobile phones

X-plore is a file manager for Symbian phones, with wide range of functions on phone's file system. Features:View all drives / folders / files on phone in tree view *Integrated text and image viewerView file detailsEdit file attriutes (hidder, read-only, etc)Rename and delete filesCreate or edit text filesCreate foldersMulti-selectionCopy or move files and foldersSend files by Bluetooth or

Lonelycatgames X-plore final for Symbian mobile phones

X-plore is a file manager for Symbian phones, with wide range of functions on phone's file system. Features:View all drives / folders / files on phone in tree view *Integrated text and image viewerView file detailsEdit file attriutes (hidder, read-only, etc)Rename and delete filesCreate or edit text filesCreate foldersMulti-selectionCopy or move files and foldersSend files by Bluetooth or

Samsung's F200 music phone

This is a small slim slider inspired be Samsung's X830. It has a 1.46-inch 220 x 128 resolution external display, support for MP3, WMA, OGG, DCF, and SMP file formats and supports microSD cards. Pics from a Taiwanese site.Click for sogi.com.tw

Samsung's F200 music phone

This is a small slim slider inspired be Samsung's X830. It has a 1.46-inch 220 x 128 resolution external display, support for MP3, WMA, OGG, DCF, and SMP file formats and supports microSD cards. Pics from a Taiwanese site.Click for sogi.com.tw

Samsung's F200 music phone

This is a small slim slider inspired be Samsung's X830. It has a 1.46-inch 220 x 128 resolution external display, support for MP3, WMA, OGG, DCF, and SMP file formats and supports microSD cards. Pics from a Taiwanese site.Click for sogi.com.tw

Mobile TV warned to standardise

A European Commission (EC) official has issued a stern warning to those involved in mobile TV to agree on adopting a single technology standard. EC telecoms commissioner Viviane Reding said that if the industry did not agree on one, she would do it for them. This is taken from an article from BBC.Clcik for article

Mobile TV warned to standardise

A European Commission (EC) official has issued a stern warning to those involved in mobile TV to agree on adopting a single technology standard. EC telecoms commissioner Viviane Reding said that if the industry did not agree on one, she would do it for them. This is taken from an article from BBC.Clcik for article

Mobile TV warned to standardise

A European Commission (EC) official has issued a stern warning to those involved in mobile TV to agree on adopting a single technology standard. EC telecoms commissioner Viviane Reding said that if the industry did not agree on one, she would do it for them. This is taken from an article from BBC.

More real pics of Sony Ericsson's W660i

More real pics of the W660i from engadget. It looks great. It looks even better than the other pic from esato. I am still waiting for real pics of the black version. There are more pics on engadget's site.Click to visit

More real pics of Sony Ericsson's W660i

More real pics of the W660i from engadget. It looks great. It looks even better than the other pic from esato. I am still waiting for real pics of the black version. There are more pics on engadget's site.Click to visit

More real pics of Sony Ericsson's W660i

More real pics of the W660i from engadget. It looks great. It looks even better than the other pic from esato. I am still waiting for real pics of the black version. There are more pics on engadget's site.

Bellperre - Timeless Luxury Phones

A new mobile phone brand enters the market. What is special, is the fact that their phones will be constructed with luxury materials. There will be '0%' plastic. I wonder what the tech specs are. They have a website but there is currently little info available.Click to visit

Bellperre - Timeless Luxury Phones

A new mobile phone brand enters the market. What is special, is the fact that their phones will be constructed with luxury materials. There will be '0%' plastic. I wonder what the tech specs are. They have a website but there is currently little info available.Click to visit

Bellperre - Timeless Luxury Phones

A new mobile phone brand enters the market. What is special, is the fact that their phones will be constructed with luxury materials. There will be '0%' plastic. I wonder what the tech specs are. They have a website but there is currently little info available.Click to visit

Nokia updates PC Suite to 6.82

Below is a list of changes.- Updated listing of network operators in One Touch Access- Increased stability and reliability for the main window of Nokia PC Suite- Stability fixes for backup and restore- Improved mobile music experience with Nokia Music Manager- Update your phone software with Nokia Software Updater- Added fluency in information exchange between Nokia phones and Microsoft

Nokia updates PC Suite to 6.82

Below is a list of changes.- Updated listing of network operators in One Touch Access- Increased stability and reliability for the main window of Nokia PC Suite- Stability fixes for backup and restore- Improved mobile music experience with Nokia Music Manager- Update your phone software with Nokia Software Updater- Added fluency in information exchange between Nokia phones and Microsoft

Nokia updates PC Suite to 6.82

Below is a list of changes.- Updated listing of network operators in One Touch Access- Increased stability and reliability for the main window of Nokia PC Suite- Stability fixes for backup and restore- Improved mobile music experience with Nokia Music Manager- Update your phone software with Nokia Software Updater- Added fluency in information exchange between Nokia phones and Microsoft

Suggestion Box

I thought it would be good to add a suggestion box to Mobile Opportunity. Here it is. If you have any questions, comments, or suggestions about this weblog, please post a comment here. I'll link to this post from the sidebar, so you can get to it easily.

Thanks in advance for your feedback.

TWUIK for mobile phones

Cutting edge FLASH-like graphical user interface technologies for mobile devices. It is simply amazing. It must be seen to be believed. Check out their website. Tons of info and video clips.Click to visit

TWUIK for mobile phones

Cutting edge FLASH-like graphical user interface technologies for mobile devices. It is simply amazing. It must be seen to be believed. Check out their website. Tons of info and video clips.Click to visit

TWUIK for mobile phones

Cutting edge FLASH-like graphical user interface technologies for mobile devices. It is simply amazing. It must be seen to be believed. Check out their website. Tons of info and video clips.

Another pic of the K850

The front was made by deuxani as I posted earlier. Now another individual under the name of 'thecoolsha' has improvised on the pic and added as to how the backside of the K850 would look. This is also based on the leaked pics. Great work!

Another pic of the K850

The front was made by deuxani as I posted earlier. Now another individual under the name of 'thecoolsha' has improvised on the pic and added as to how the backside of the K850 would look. This is also based on the leaked pics. Great work!

Another pic of the K850

The front was made by deuxani as I posted earlier. Now another individual under the name of 'thecoolsha' has improvised on the pic and added as to how the backside of the K850 would look. This is also based on the leaked pics. Great work!

Live pic of Sony Ericsson's W660i

The first live pic of the phone that I have seen online. Thank you esato.

Live pic of Sony Ericsson's W660i

The first live pic of the phone that I have seen online. Thank you esato.

Live pic of Sony Ericsson's W660i

The first live pic of the phone that I have seen online. Thank you esato.

Psiloc localizations update 1.30

Psiloc has just released a new version (1.30) of all Psiloc localizations for UIQ3. Upgrades are free for all legitimate users.Click for psiloc

Psiloc localizations update 1.30

Psiloc has just released a new version (1.30) of all Psiloc localizations for UIQ3. Upgrades are free for all legitimate users.Click for psiloc

Psiloc localizations update 1.30

Psiloc has just released a new version (1.30) of all Psiloc localizations for UIQ3. Upgrades are free for all legitimate users.Click for psiloc

Sony Ericsson K850i

This picture was created by the well known and talented individual under the name of 'deuxani'. It can be found on various forums like esato and mobile-review. It is based on the pictures that was leaked recently by a Chinese site. I really like how the phone looks in his pic. Excellent work deuxani.

Sony Ericsson K850i

This picture was created by the well known and talented individual under the name of 'deuxani'. It can be found on various forums like esato and mobile-review. It is based on the pictures that was leaked recently by a Chinese site. I really like how the phone looks in his pic. Excellent work deuxani.

Nokia N91 vs Sony Ericsson W950i

N91 is Nokia's flag ship music phone. It has a 2 megapixel camera without auto focus. It has Nokia's Symbian S60 3rd Edition operating system. It has built in 4gb of storage space. W950i is Sony Ericsson's flagship music phone. It has no camera. It has Sony Ericsson's Symbian UIQ 3 operating system. It has a touchscreen. I personally like the look of the W950i more. It is smaller and

Nokia N91 vs Sony Ericsson W950i

N91 is Nokia's flag ship music phone. It has a 2 megapixel camera without auto focus. It has Nokia's Symbian S60 3rd Edition operating system. It has built in 4gb of storage space. W950i is Sony Ericsson's flagship music phone. It has no camera. It has Sony Ericsson's Symbian UIQ 3 operating system. It has a touchscreen. I personally like the look of the W950i more. It is smaller and

.NET apps now possible on Symbian phones

This implementation is brought to us by redfivelabs. This makes mobile applications for Microsoft's .NET Compact Framework to run on Symbian phones unchanged.Cllick to visit

.NET apps now possible on Symbian phones

This implementation is brought to us by redfivelabs. This makes mobile applications for Microsoft's .NET Compact Framework to run on Symbian phones unchanged.Cllick to visit

.NET apps now possible on Symbian phones

This implementation is brought to us by redfivelabs. This makes mobile applications for Microsoft's .NET Compact Framework to run on Symbian phones unchanged.Cllick to visit

.NET apps now possible on Symbian phones

This implementation is brought to us by redfivelabs. This makes mobile applications for Microsoft's .NET Compact Framework to run on Symbian phones unchanged.Cllick to visit

Amazing new rally game for UIQ 3

It's a 3-d racer game where the viewer perspective is from above. Each car is equiped with mines and rockets and cars are upgradable. It is fun and has great graphics. It also has downloadable content. The graphics remind me of the game skyforce. There are more details at my-symbian.Click to visit

Amazing new rally game for UIQ 3

It's a 3-d racer game where the viewer perspective is from above. Each car is equiped with mines and rockets and cars are upgradable. It is fun and has great graphics. It also has downloadable content. The graphics remind me of the game skyforce. There are more details at my-symbian.Click to visit

Amazing new rally game for UIQ 3

It's a 3-d racer game where the viewer perspective is from above. Each car is equiped with mines and rockets and cars are upgradable. It is fun and has great graphics. It also has downloadable content. The graphics remind me of the game skyforce. There are more details at my-symbian.Click to visit

Amazing new rally game for UIQ 3

It's a 3-d racer game where the viewer perspective is from above. Each car is equiped with mines and rockets and cars are upgradable. It is fun and has great graphics. It also has downloadable content. The graphics remind me of the game skyforce. There are more details at my-symbian.Click to visit

eTel: The open source phone crowd talks to itself

The Emerging Telephony (eTel) conference brings together the open source and web telephony community. It's a bit of a geekfest, with a lot more focus on technology than on business issues, but some of the trends and ideas I saw at it this year are worth sharing.

I wrote a business-oriented summary for the Rubicon weblog, focusing on three issues I saw at the conference that I think have broad relevance to tech companies: the emerging standards for identity management, the vulnerability of mashups to unexpected failures and security holes, and the integration of voice services into websites. I won't repeat that discussion here; you can click here to read that post. What I'll do here is go into more detail about the other interesting things I saw.


First, a couple of overall comments about the conference:

We're breathing our own exhaust. There were about 280 people on the attendee list for the conference. Several speakers asked for a show of hands from all who worked at operators and handset vendors. Virtually no hands went up. Looking through the attendee list, I saw one or two people each from BT, Sprint, DoCoMo, and Vodafone. France Telecom/Orange had several people and was a sponsor. On the handset side, there were individuals from Nokia, Motorola, UT Starcom, and Palm. But absolutely no Verizon, TMobile, Cingular/ATT, Samsung, LG, RIM, SonyEricsson, etc. Basically, the conference consisted of open source telephony enthusiasts and Internet companies speaking to themselves and confidently predicting the downfall of the operators.

In Silicon Valley we call this "breathing your own exhaust" -- you bring together a bunch of people who already agree with each other, and they reinforce each others' opinions. A lot of conferences are like that, and I don't want to ding the O'Reilly folks who ran the conference because they can't really control who comes to their events. But it was symptomatic of the lack of communication between Silicon Valley and the operators. That missing dialog affected the presentations of some of the speakers.

An example: An otherwise excellent speaker on identity, Kaliya Hamlin, tried to suggest some potential win-win strategies in identity management that would help users while still enabling the operators to make money. She suggested that the operators offer identity services and tie them to a commerce engine, so users could buy things and charge them through their wireless bills. It's a great idea, and the Japanese operators are already doing it. But I know from personal experience that as soon as you mention "billing" to most of the US and European operators they run screaming from the room. Their billing systems are already too complex, held together by chewing gum and spiderwebs, and the thought of making a big change to them is terrifying. Kaiya gets an A for effort, but in a forum that had a balanced representation her idea would have been discussed and debated rather than just tossed out there.

Somewhere, sometime I'd like to see a forum where the operators and the Internet folks could engage as equals and attempt to find common ground. Agreement might be impossible, but at least it'd be fun to watch.

The ideas for mobile social communities give me the creeps. People who go to conferences tend to be outgoing; one of the reasons they go is because they enjoy interacting with other people. The O'Reilly folks cultivate this attitude very well, with a lot of breaks and discussion sessions that run late into the night. The energy level is great, and reminded me a bit of some of the early Mac and Palm developer conferences.

But when you take those same extroverts and ask them to design social networking software, the results are creepy. Don't get me wrong, I think online communities are one of the building blocks of the future economy. But the type of community I prefer is one where you interact only on particular topics that you want to share. What the extroverts are designing is communities in which deep knowledge about everyone else is a goal in and of itself.

Case in point: Jyrki Engestrom of Jaiku showed an S60 presence client designed to "bring your address book to life." What it does is collect information about your current status and relay that to everyone else on your contact list. Jyrki showed us the status report on his wife -- at the time of his presentation, she was asleep, with the ringer turned off, at home (the software picks up where the user is through location services). He could also check his wife's calendar to see who she's meeting the next day. In the future, the client will be extended to show what music the user is listening to, and will use Bluetooth to report on anyone else who's nearby. The client also has an API, of course, so we can all extend it to give even greater layers of intimacy.

And of course it'll all be paid for by (drumroll, please) advertising that gets tailored to all that personal information the phone is collecting about you.

Jyrki says the effect is like having a blog, but with smaller chunks of content -- a lifestream, a "living address book." To me, it was more like a system for making everyone the star of their own little reality TV show. Think about it, an entire world that works like LiveJournal. I've got no problem with the folks who enjoy that, but I suspect this will be yet another mobile feature that cuts the mobile market into segments -- some people will like it, and some people would rather bodysurf in a gravel pit.

(For the record, I'm the only luddite who thinks this way. Check out this amusing rant from Steve Bryant regarding Twitter.)

Yahoo is more fun at a conference than Google. If you're ever at a conference and have to choose between attending a talk by a Google exec and one by a Yahoo exec, go to the Yahoo one. Yahoo people sometimes (not always) share ideas and interesting projects they're working on. They seem to hold the same philosophy as many web app companies, that if you share good ideas you'll get back more benefit than you give away. Google, meanwhile, is tighter than Spandex jeans on a 16-year-old. They don't share information on any unannounced projects, so about the only thing they can do at a conference is talk about work they already completed. At a conference I attended last year, a Google manager gave a talk on how they created Google Calendar. Get this -- they interviewed users. Oooooooh. The Google speaker at eTel, Chris Sacca, was much more entertaining. But as expected he talked about history -- Google's work to build a WiFi network in Mountain View, California.


Other highlights

Microsoft has fun with SMS. Sean Blagesvedt and Rajesh Veeraraghavan of Microsoft Labs showed off an experimental project that lets someone send instructions and database queries from a mobile to a PC via SMS. On the PC, you use an Excel template to control how the system will respond to the SMS commands. The PC can send messages back to the phone via SMS. The whole system is effectively a tiny command-line interface between the phone and the computer.

That would be an interesting but not-too-compelling experiment in the US or Europe, but they're aiming it at developing countries where it's difficult for a small business to set up a separate web server, and 3G connections are rare or expensive. Using the existing 2G infrastructure and a low-end PC, a company could set up a basic information access system. I liked the idea.

Coincidentally, Don Norman just wrote an article pointing out the rebirth of the command line in search engines interfaces and in computer operating systems. So this stuff is popping out all over (thanks to David Beers for the link).

Universal identity. I mentioned Kaliya Hamlin's talk above, and I hope it didn't sound like I was picking on her, because I thought she did one of the best talks at the conference. She described the efforts that several organizations are making to create a single, unified system for verifying your identity online. The goal is that you log in once per browsing session, and after that you're automatically logged into every site you visit. There's a lot of work going into making this an open standard, so various competing identity services can operate underneath it. I was impressed with the work that's going into it, and I think it'll be useful infrastructure for the industry, even though I'm not sure if it's solving a burning need for the average user.

Tidbit from the front lines in a municipal wireless deployment. Chris Sacca of Google said the WiFi network it installed in Mountain View, CA, is seeing steady growth. One notable statistic: in any given day, about 90% of the base stations get some traffic. All of them get traffic in a given week. Traffic is highest in the lowest-income parts of the city. That sounds strange, but think about it for a minute -- the rich people all have cable or DSL already. Municipal wireless is often depicted as a benefit for rich people, but maybe by democratizing access to the Web it actually helps poor people the most.

(Of course, "poor" in Mountain View is a relative thing. Maybe "less well off" would be a better term.)

He also showed a lot of amusing pictures of dinosaurs, a pointed reference to the operators. That pretty well reflected the attitude of most of the speakers at the conference.

Progress reports on open source mobile devices. A couple of companies showed works in progress on open source mobile devices. TrollTech demonstrated its Greenphone, which is prototype hardware of a phone running its QTopia Linux (demo devices are, unfortunately, what you have to produce when you don't have a local licensee shipping your latest stuff). Fonav showed a new UI and PIM suite built on the Greenphone, and OpenMoko discussed the Linux phone it's developing. All of the products were interesting, but I kept wondering what unique problems they would solve for users. It was hard to tell, because the time available for demos was very small.

I don't think open source phones that do the same things as the smartphones already on the market are going to excite many users. The thing holding back smartphone adoption isn't the proprietary nature of their operating systems, it's their lack of compelling functionality for most users. If the open source phone guys could turn their energies loose on that problem, I think they'd have a better chance of changing the world.