Vodacom breaks South African Mobile Web Experience

Vodacom tried an interesting move and pre-format Web pages for their subscribers’ cellphones in South Africa. Unfortunately they like everybody else ran into problems by transforming Web Content into Mobile Content.

The results are quite funny and it’s amazing that companies like Vodacom don’t fully test the system. The South African Internet Society statet the following:

““Various applications that include instant messaging, banking, specialised mobile applications such as e-mail, YouTube, Twitter, Fring and at least a dozen others, are no longer working,”

June 29, 2008


Mobile Advertising Works

Read write web posted a small article about Mobile Advertising and how it can work:
“For the much-sought-after and elusive 18-24 year old segment of the market, mobile advertising has promise. In fact, according to data from a BIGresearch study, it’s twice as effective among younger consumers with 14.2% of 18 to 24 year-olds saying that mobile video influenced them and 15.9% saying text messaging did.”

June 28, 2008


MocoSpace – 1.5 billion page views

1.5billion pageviews on a mobile is “pretty sick”:

Top 10 mobile sites in the U.S.

  1. www.myspace.com
  2. www.google.com
  3. www.mocospace.com
  4. www.yahoo.com
  5. www.facebook.com
  6. www.live.com
  7. www.hi5.com
  8. www.wikipedia.org
  9. www.itsmy.com
  10. www.ebay.com
June 26, 2008


Mobile Web will soar past 1.7 billion in five years’ time

Metro UK has a great article about the future of the mobile web:

“According to a new report from Juniper Research, the increasing popularity of social networking sites, instant messaging and user-generated content will see the current figure of 577 million worldwide users triple by 2013.

The research suggests that the fall of so-called ‘walled gardens’ of content controlled by the network operators will lead to increased take-up of what they call mobile web 2.0.

“The mobile web 2.0 market is still nascent and business models remain in a state of flux, so there is still time for players to establish fruitful partnerships that build on their strengths and are reciprocally beneficial. The window of opportunity, however, is closing,” said Ian Chard, Juniper Research Analyst and author of the report.”



Businessweek article: Moving to the Mobile Web

A few interesting numbers  and Iphone Apps from todays Businessweek article “Moving to the Mobile Web“:

- The Iphone has sold 5.4 million times

- 17,000 sites or “Web applications” are optimized for the device.

- The Ifund has received 2,000 plans, 20 times more than they typically receive for the mobile space

- Iphone Apps

June 24, 2008


Nokia acquires Symbian For $410 Million

Big news for the Mobile future: Nokia acquired Symbian and seems to steps in the foot prints of Google Android:

“Finnish cellphone maker Nokia Corp said on Tuesday it was buying out other shareholders of UK-based handset software firm Symbian Ltd, and opening the software for royalty-free use.

The net cash outlay from Nokia to buy the approximately 52 percent of Symbian shares it does not already own will be about 264 million euros ($410 million).
Nokia said Sony Ericsson, Ericsson, Panasonic and Siemens have accepted the offer, and it also expects Samsung Electronics to accept it.
Nokia also said it had formed Symbian Foundation together with AT&T, NTT DoCoMo, Vodafone, and chip makers Texas Instruments and STMicroelectronics.”

Here some other blogs covering it:

Webworker Daily

Creativegeek

Eweek Blog

Ostatic Blog



Iphone Stencils

Got I don’t like Graffeltopia (yes I still use a PC!), but they always come up with genius stuff:

Iphone Stencils

Click image to enlarge

June 23, 2008


Mobile Web – Men Only (almost)

A survey from Opera revealed the following:

A survey commissioned by the browser outfit Opera claims that it is mostly men who use the interweb from their mobile phone.  More than 83% of men use their mobiles to browse, in comparison to 16% of women.”

I guess Perez Hilton doesn’t need to publish his wisdom on the mobile web. Not sure if this is a bad thing?

June 22, 2008


Mobile Firefox “Fennec” Won’t launch Until 2009

Mobile Firefox Fennec won’t launch until 2009, but an alpha version should be available soon:

“Mozilla’s mobile web browser, which is under development as part of Firefox 4 platform and code named Fennec, won’t launch until 2009. Still, the team is planning to release the first alpha version by the end of August and a viable beta by year’s end, according to Mozilla.org. Fennec is expected to reach another milestone on June 20 with the release of M4.”



IPhone Clones And The Mobile Web

Gizmodo has a great article about IPhone clones or Phones that have the same UI as an Iphone:Instinct, Vu, Voyager, and Glyde.

All mobiles have great features, but none of these phones seem to have good mobile web capabilities:

“One thing they all have in common is a shitty browser. There isn’t a mobile browser that touches mobile Safari yet. Even when they could render HTML correctly, moving and zooming around the page (especially ones that aren’t mobile optimized) is an exercise in self-control—how long can you take it before stabbing your eyes out. Opera mini does load on the Vu, and it’s better than the included browser, but it worked kinda wonikly at times. For me, that’s a critical flaw in all of these phones.”

I really wonder why this happened. Are the operators afraid of the slowness of their network or how come none of these clones work good for the mobile web? Anybody an idea?



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