Archive for the 'Locative Media' Category

Web goes Mobile … no, honestly.

After you have been to a few “latest-buzzword-on-the-mobile” events, it is likely you become a bit jaded. Hype after hype wave breaks onto our shores but we are still missing a sizable audience changing its behaviour. Where is the move from voice and SMS towards mobile data usage (MMS, email, IM, WAP, web, widgets)? Last night, Mobile Monday’s panel handed out some refreshingly honest opinions without the inflated projections.

Instead the talk was more about:

  • what will constitute a truly mobile digital experience (immediate, identifiable/personal, always-on, context, location, social graph)
  • that Mobile 2.0 will therefore be different from but build upon Web 2.0 (like TV built on theatre and radio, web on print and TV)
  • the (slow) arrival of pricing models that are less about “bill shock” and more about “worry free use” aka data flat rates
  • carriers hopefully becoming “smart pipes” and sharing traffic and customer data, thereby helping to combine and improve mobile experiences
  • developing widgets which don’t require a browser in an open-standards-platform
  • social networking as one key experience defining 3G (like voice did for 1G and SMS did for 2G)
  • MoMo panel
    Mobile Monday’s panel, picture taken with iPhone by Halans

    Speakers included Gary Chan from Forum Nokia, Oliver Palmer from TigerSpike, Oliver Weidlich from Ideal Interfaces and Jennifer Wilson from NineMSN. Mobile Monday’s own wrap up can be found here.

    Is that a $US217b company in your pocket…? Google announces OpenSocial APIs

    (chart from alleyinsider.com)

    It seems like just a few years ago that Google was a cute little company with a funny name and logo. “Look! You can type something into the box and it brings back results so fast!. Goooooogle. Even saying it makes me smile”.

    Ok - so that was only a few years ago. And while I don’t want to make this an “impending doom” post, there’s a couple of things lining up that are worth keeping an eye on. With AdSense, Google already monetizes a page better than anyone else. They have made scraping a page for context and serving up relevant ads a Web 1.0 cliche. But on November 6, Facebook will announce what many expect to be their ’social ads’ plan (ads based on profile and personal content). This will be the next generation of commercialising online activity, and given Facebook’s cohesive structure, and the trust consumers have shown in offering up their data, it will be extremely compelling. But even despite the site’s astronomical growth (in Australia up to 1.75m UVs) it only accounts a for small percentage of overall web usage. The rest of the web’s out there and still growing too.

    Now back to GOOG. Yesterday this press release surfaced on John Battelle’s blog “Google Launches OpenSocial to Spread Social Applications Across the Web. Google has long been rumoured to be making a bigger social play (why not?) and thankfully they’re not simply making the ‘big in Brazil’ Orkut more international. Actually they are, but that’s a small component. Google have announced that they have developed APIs to connect a range of ’social hosts’ with core functions across profile information, friends information and personal content. At launch these hosts will include Linkedin, Hi5, Friendster, Plaxo, Ning and, of course Orkut. With these participating networks, developers can now reach a dispersed audience across a range of sites using common applications and functions. More soon on the kinds of things we can expect from developers when OpenSocial goes live soon.

    So a united social profiling play, combined with a vast audience of advertisers in the AdSense platfrom clambering to reach you in a targeted way. That’s big. I wonder if there’s anything that AT&T (#4 above in the ‘biggest companies in the US’ chart) has planned of a similar scale. But to quote a famous keynoter: “there’s one more thing”. Mobile. Whether the Google Mobile OS comes out in two weeks or next year, things are becoming clearer.

    Google could soon have another killer app. Search has been um.. reasonably good to them. But social networking digitally is now a mainstream lifestyle activity. For some it’s replacing email, for others it have become their trusted, always-on address book. But the mobile has been the predominant tool for communication, and mobile internet access (supported by unlimited data plans) is quickly becoming an everyday thing. So here’s a formula to ponder:

    Google x (social + mobile + profile advertising) = y

    Choose from:

    a) y = a completely socially integrated location-based mobile address book that is aware when my friends available online or for a call, that knows if they know each other (and whether they like each other) and mutates automatically with their every move. The beginning of the inevitable migration of social networking from the confines of the PC to your pocket.

    b) y = cheaper advertising-supported mobile access where flattening carrier revenues are propped up by the first killer mobile ad model that actually works. A defining moment for global carriers.

    c) y = too much for consumers. the beginning of the great anti-Google backlash…

    Update:
    AdAge reports about consumer associations and activists such as the EFF starting to rally for a Do Not Track-List, allowing users to opt out (like a white list) of all behavioural targeting.

    Intel Ultra Mobile PC interfaces of the future

    Now and then it’s good to remind ourselves that the tried and true ways we interact with connected services, are actually always evolving. I find these future vision-type presentations interesting both from the perspectives of interface design and also emerging habits and usage. The Intel UMPC video below shows a range of different devices taking advantage of the new version of their mobile computing platform due to be announced this week. I think ambient devices, like the bracelets worn in the clip, are going to increasingly be part of our lives in different forms. This is an extension of the idea that your information, identity and content might be stored in one place but accessed and interpretted differently depending on your context (eg. a new email might make your bracelet glow while it knows you’re away from your PC, or do nothing if you’re sitting in front of it).

    Take a look: http://www.youtube.com/v/HrzeiUvDZog

    London Bridge is Turning Blue

    switchedon.jpg

    Jason Bruges has created a bluetooth-fuelled installation on the London Bridge that demonstrates how art can intersect with technology for startling results. Here’s his description of the project:

    “Using Bluetooth sensors, the movement of individuals carrying active Bluetooth devices will be captured on London Bridge. The information is then transmitted across the Pool of London to the high level walkways on Tower Bridge, where a dynamic band of light displays the activity for all to see.”

    Brands should be considering how to involve people in experiential communications like this. When data is reinterpreted with artistic prowess, the outcome can offer a degrees of implicit participation and collective input that only emerging technology can enable. This is another wonderful example of the online and offline worlds colliding.

    More details and images at the creator’s site: http://www.jasonbruges.com/

    Locative Virtuality

    Recently at the SXSW conference in Austin, Texas, Reuters interviewed Jerry Paffendorf from the Electric Sheep Company. There are some very interesting concepts discussed in this 30 minute chat, not the least of which is the idea of how Google Maps might mashup with Second Life. This is where the whole planet might exist in an alternative, mirrored video game format, complete with geo-location aspects tying the real and virtual worlds together. Have a listen, some mind-blowing stuff:

    http://int1.fp.sandpiper.net/reuters42/2007/03/sxsw/jerry-paffendorf.mp3