Monday, March 31, 2008

Loopt Now Available On Verizon

The problem with attempts at mobile social networking right now is lack of crticial mass -- social networking is only fun if your friends are there, and there simply aren't enough people engaged in the services to make them truly useful - yet.

Mobile versions of Twitter and Facebook are one way this might change.

Another way this might evolve is if a mobile social network gets to critical mass. For this to happen, it would need to be available independent of the carrier you are on.

Think about it -- if online social networking was segregated based upon your ISP how useful would it really be? Not very.

Until recently, a pretty cool location-based mobile social network -- Loopt -- suffered from this.

Today, Loopt announced that it is now going to be available on Verizon as well as Sprint and Boost.

The value of Loopt - finding your friends in real space in real time on your phone -- is only relevant if your friends are part of the service.

By itself, adding Verizon won't be enough to make this service relevant -- but it is definitely a step in the right direction. More access should (could?) lead to more subscribers and that should (could) lead to more value in the service for all of us.

Are you on Loopt? Comment if so -- I am all signed up and would love to know who else is out there..

paying for mobile music content? really?

AT&T has two new musical offerings and one in the works:

1 - Make UR-Tones allows customers to customize ringtones from their favorite part of a song (1-30 seconds), right on their handsets. The mSpot Make-UR-Tones is available for a monthly subscription of $6.99 for three ringtones, with additional customized ringtones available for purchase on an a la carte basis for $2.99.

2 - Remix gives customers access to their PC-based music collections directly from their phones. For $9.99 per month you get a monthly subscription that allows 75 song downloads. Remix is compatible with the Samsung SYNC, A737 and the LG SHINE phones.

3 - Napster (coming next month) wireless, over-the-air downloads at $7.49 per five songs, or $1.99 for a single track-download

(thanks to Into Mobile for the details on theses services)

These offerings confuse me. Are we realy going to pay an additional 7-10 bucks/month for music on our phone? When we also have to pay 15 bucks for unlimited data? And when, in the case of Remix, we also have to pay to get the music to our PC in the first place? Or, in the case of Napster, that I will pay MORE money to get music on my phone than I will to get in on my iPod? REALLY?

Why is it so hard for the powers that be to understand that consumers don't want to pay every time we shift our music from one device to another or change a file format from one kind to another?

My bet is that these new AT&T services will fail. Not because they doesn't add value -- but because the pricing model is wrong, wrong, wrong.

Don't misunderstand -- I think people will continue to listen to music on their phones. Ringtones are fun! I've got Lupe Fiasco, Timbaland, and A Beautiful Mine bumping from my phones. But I think that services priced like this make consumers (people like me!) feel like we're getting nickel and dimed to death.

If anything, it seems like carriers should be using music as a loss leader to build a relationship with a customer and/or a tool to get people to a moment where they can then sell a higher ticket item.

Anyone else want to disagree and tell me that you are excited about the chance to spend 7 to 10 bucks a month for something like this?

::cricket:: ::cricket::

(I'm not expecting many responses on this one...)

Obopay

Obopay is trying to make m payments real.

With Obopay, you can:

- Send money immediately from your phone to friends
- Get paid on your phone
- Buy stuff on your phone

Basically, it turns your phone into a prepaid Mastercard -- you transfer money to your phone, and then you can spend it as you like.

The costs?
- 2.5% to add money to your phone from a credit card or debit card
- Free to add money directly from your bank account
- 10 cents every time you want to send money somewhere
- Free to get paid or receive money

Compatibility?
- Works via SMS on all carriers except AT&T
- Also works from the mobile web: wap.obopay.com

Secure?
- PIN-based every time you send money
- Multiple layers of encryption algorithms so transmitted data cannot be compromised


Sounds pretty cool. It's not brand new, but still somewhat in its infancy. I'm going to try and report back in.

Anyone else actually using this? Do you like it?

Another One Joins The M Class

Time for a little Monday morning mobile love:

Amanda, from Media Post, tells the story of life with her new smartphone:

"I could not love my phone more. The time I spend with my phone has tripled, easily. I used to think it was obnoxious that people spent so much time hovering over their mobile screen, but now I know why! I wrote part of a final paper while sitting on a bus to a museum; I watch a lot of mobile video – mostly CNN updates; I wake up and check the weather, my e-mails, news and Facebook without leaving bed. I feel like petitioning to every major company to create mobile websites!"

Let's review Amanda's situation after getting used to her new SmartPhone.

source of news: mobile
social networking hub: mobile
email: mobile
demand for more mobile content: yes

Sounds m2 to me.

Friday, March 28, 2008

Dr. Mobile?

I woke up this morning and the news on talk radio was buzz about OTC DNA tests. This may not be such a big deal, and maybe I've seen too many movies, but one word kept flashing in my mind: GATTACA GATTACA GATTACA.

And there's more on the same note this morning, this time from Japan. DoCoMo, one of the largest Japanese carriers, is developing a biometric scanner that can be integrated into a mobile device. Essentially, the scanner would be able to accept bio-samples (sweat, tear, blood, saliva), analyze them, and communicate this information wirelessly to the relevant network -- be it a doctor's office, a police station, or a government agency. The official story is that the system will be used for remote health checks or preventive medicine.

What do you think of this? Useful? Scary?

Personally, I'll admit to being a little unnerved by it despite my general embrace of the brave new mobile world we are all entering.

Thanks to Wireless Watch Japan for this story.

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Thursday, March 27, 2008

m pay: close to reality or distant future?

According to a recent study by the Aberdeen Group, more than 58 percent of retail respondents in the survey indicated that they plan to implement contactless payment solutions within the next 18-24 months.

This study seems to be supported by this list (from the Smart Card Alliance)of real world North American trials going on right now:

In June 2007, Visa and Wells Fargo announced the launch of an extensive mobile pilot to test consumer mobile payments and services using mobile devices equipped with NFC technology. The pilot will test secure, over-the-air delivery of payment account information to the mobile device, mobile payments in stores and restaurants accepting Visa payWave technology, receiving and redeeming mobile coupons, and account management services.


In June 2007, Cellular South announced the launch of the first-ever consumer trial of its WirelessWallet service based on the Kyocera biometric NFC phone and ViVOtech wallet software. This service allowed consumers to open their mobile wallets on NFC mobile phones using their fingerprint.

- Results? 87% of testers are interested in WirelessWallet when it is available.


In March 2007, MasterCard and Mobile Candy Dish launched a pilot in Chicago to enable consumers to advance order movie tickets and to purchase concessions in real-time using an NFC phone. Consumers can also get directions, maps and a list of nearby points of interest including restaurants, shopping malls, and gas stations.


In February 2007, Discover Financial Services and Motorola Inc. launched a mobile payment and account management trial that enabled participants to check their Discover Card account balances, review payment history, and make purchases using their mobile phones in place of the traditional plastic credit card.


In January 2007, HSBC launched a mobile phone payment pilot in partnership with MasterCard and ViVOtech. Using a simple OTA personalization process, participants in New York, Chicago, and several other large U.S. cities loaded their HSBC credit cards onto their mobile phones. Participants are able to use their NFC phones at thousands of PayPass-enabled merchant locations nationwide. Recently, HSBC has extended the pilot to allow its debit cards to be downloaded onto NFC mobile phones, resulting in the first multi-card NFC mobile phone pilot.


In December 2006, Citigroup, MasterCard, Cingular, and Nokia announced a team effort to pilot next-generation mobile phones using NFC technology with "Tap & Go(TM)" capabilities in New York City, using software and services provided by Giesecke & Devrient and ViVOtech.


In November 2006 , MasterCard Worldwide announced a market trial of the use of NFC-enabled mobile phones for "Tap & Go" payment in partnership with Nokia, 7-Eleven, Inc. and Peoples Bank of Paris, Texas.

In December 2005, Visa participated in a first-of-its-kind NFC trial for mobile phone proximity payment and content downloads in the Philips Arena in Atlanta, working with Philips Semiconductor (NXP), Nokia, Cingular, Chase and ViVOtech.

Given the fact that retailers indicate they are planning for this, and the fact that financial institutions, networks and handset manufacturers are working together to make this happen, what's the hold-up? And do consumers care?

The Smart Card Alliance blames the hold-up on the number of stakeholders that must be on board to build the inftrastructure to make this work - but contends that this is a problem that has been getting worked out for close to a decade now and should be resolved shortly.

The SCA also thinks consumers will care because they are looking for expanded payment functionality, increased convenience, enhanced security, and faster transactions.

So m pay works for consumers & drives efficiencies for business. Won't be long.

Anyone disagree?

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Friday, March 21, 2008

a whole new world

a friend of mine recently joined the m class with the purchase of an iphone.

it's fun to watch the joy and delight of a world opening up for someone - it gives credence to my faith that technology, and mobile in particular, can positively change the way we move through life.

the m life comes in big moments, like your first iphone, and in small moments, like adding a new widget to your phone. i have fallen in love with reqall over the last couple days. admittedly, i have been at times called a brilliant pinhead, with a good mind for the big picture and a weakness for details. this makes me a perfect candidate for reqall -- a free, virtual dictation service that generates a to-do list for you. now when i remember i need to do something, i can just speed dial reqall, speak the task that i need to remember, and within minutes it shows up on my to-do list, which is now always a button's touch away on my phone.

this may not sound revolutionary to you, but i love it. it's free, easy, and useful. what more do you want?

add enough of these little moments together and life works differently. more m. less headache.

what's your latest m moment?

Wednesday, March 19, 2008

m2 catalysts: all you can eat data & the iPhone

two big reasons we are not all yet in the m class?

terrible handsets & high data costs.

lots of handsets feature clunky user-interfaces that allow you to revisit the feeling of web surfing in the mid-90s. this is changing, led by the iphone. so says M:Metrics anyway.



the differences in m1 and m2 behavior between the iphone and other smartphones is as big as the difference between smartphones and plain old dumbphones. people search more, surf more, and social network more. surprised? you shouldn't be: when it's easy and affordable to live the m life, people will do it. the iphone makes the m life easy.

unlimited mobile data plans make it affordable.

how many people would surf the internet if they had to pay for every image, article and video they downloaded? every email they received? it just doesn't make sense. yet carriers have insisted on trying to recover the cost of subsidized handsets by charging outrageous data fees. until recently.

all you can eat data plans in the US -- now on offer from Sprint ($99 including voice), T-Mobile (29.99 for unlimited data on your Sidekick), Verizon and AT&T ($119 for unlimited voice and data) -- will only get cheaper.

add it to get together and you've got a society headed for the m class.

Tuesday, March 18, 2008

m1: us moblile search users

EMarketer predicts that the number of U.S. mobile search users will nearly double, from 28.8 million in 2008 to 55.8 million in 2011.

(I know Emarketer knows what they are talking about. But that still feels conservative to me...)

bCODE



YouTube video from Nokia showing a sneakpeak of the future -- using our mobile phones as an access pass to gain admittance to events.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W80xFYZOfJY

Tuesday, March 11, 2008

m3

i am looking for access & automation;
i am a part of the living grid.
the grid knows me and customizes itself to me.
thanks to qr codes & rfid chips,
i can shop and travel at will:

i am m3.

m2

i am looking for connection & entertainment;
i use applications, downloads and WAP sites:

i am m2.

m1

currently, there are over 256 million wireless subscribers in the US alone.

china mobile has 300 million subscribers.

worldwide, two billion people have mobile access and over 30 billion texts are sent each month.


the point? that's a lot of m1 out there.

The M Class.

The M Class are the people who use mobile to revolutionize their lives.

how m are you?