The Mobile Web is the New Hangout
Here’s some interesting data about Mobile Web usage, based on the recently released opera survey.
Read Write Web has a global perspective and Content Sutra has some stats for India.
Here’s some interesting data about Mobile Web usage, based on the recently released opera survey.
Read Write Web has a global perspective and Content Sutra has some stats for India.
At moblf, we share a vision of providing access to web services over SMS text messaging. A tall order when you think of it. But when you look at the opportunity it boils down to strategic planning and quick execution.
Some facts:
SMS Text Messaging is instant, as compared to email, where an average user might not access the web for sometime. Email is opened in 24 hours and replied to in 48 hours. SMS is read within 15 minutes on average and responded within 60 minutes. 65% of email is spam and less than 10% of SMS is spam. (more here Putting 2.7 billion in context: Mobile phone users)
Only 1% of the mobile users population own a smart phone, that leaves us with the rest of the 99% who have the SMS Text Messaging feature on their phones.
Here’s how it all fits in:
Scenario 1: How about accessing your mail server via your SMS Text Messaging and keeping update on your mails? Or accessing your Facebook account or Orkut account or…the possibilities here are immense.
Scenario 2: When you walk into a restaurant or a café next and find the service or foods inappropriate, you have the option of scribbling off a quick feedback / review about the place and SMS Text Messaging to a number. How would you like it?
Right customer feedback is of great importance to businesses, there are feedback mechanisms currently, which has a chance of losing its flavor during translation. Or like most people who I have interacted with, may not choose to leave a feedback as they seldom get a feedback form or the feedback number to call is too cumbersome to dial.
Scenario 3: How about you had the option of sharing your experience of a vacation you are at? The website you took the vacation from offers you a SMS Text Messaging number for you to quickly send your review.
Travel companies will love to hear from you, other users who are looking to know about the experience will advantage from you. And as for the review, it’s coming in at real time, just as you are experiencing it!
Scenario 4: SMS Text Message your order to the fast food take away counter at the corner of your street as you wait for the traffic signal to turn green. The order is ready for you to take away as you reach the window. How would you like that?
These are a few examples of how moblf can serve consumers and prosumers via their platform. Let us know what you think of them. Also, please write to us services you think will add value if they were available on SMS Text Messaging for you to use them.
Killerstartups has written about us as a killer idea. Here’s the link
Let us know what you think? Also, if you think we have a killer idea, don’t forget to vote for us on killerstartups.com
We’ve been in a mull-mode, here at moblf; working towards a few next things, shaping up our long-term goals, so on. This for me is the innate characteristic of a startup, that one will not find elsewhere – the whole experience of evolving the product or business offering, tweaking the main idea, changing it based on user and industry inputs. I am living what Paul Graham has articulated here.
What’s the relevance of moblf to the end user, to the world of communication and to web services – this is something that has occupied a great part of our mindshare here. Moblf is a platform that brings web services on mobile, specifically over SMS text messaging. With this as the premise the opportunity is vast and the possibilities immense. Who we will cater to first, what will we offer initially, what’s a good start – these are questions we’ve been trying to answer and have found some ground too. As a platform we have the opportunity to serve consumers and prosumers simultaneously, we can serve as brand moblf and also as a customized white label enterprise solution. More on relevance of moblf in my next post!
Guest post by Anikit Maheshwari, who is the CEO of Instablogs Network (www.instablogs.com)
Ironically one of the most used Mobile App is writing the script for demise of Mobile Native Apps ‘The mobile browser’. From Opera Mobile to iPhone Safari, Pocket IE to Symbian, browsers are getting more robust, and devices extremely powerful hence paving path for rich mobile web applications. All of sudden it’s starting to make more sense to build two to three different mobile web apps/sites covering almost all phones rather than doing hundreds of versions of mobile native apps to run on handful of phones.
I am not saying all Mobile Apps will be dead, but they will be becoming more like desktop apps. Native apps will be used only when they are actually needed, for e.g. a mobile photo editor, a PDF reader, etc. It’s like history is repeating itself. We have already witnessed the sharp decline in desktop apps and exponential rise in popularity of online apps. Today my most used application on my laptop is none other than Firefox browser. Most of the desktop applications I used once are replaced by online applications which are accessed by all latest browsers. I used Zoho for project management, Google Docs for online collaboration, Netvibes or Google Reader for reading feeds, Gtalk for keeping in touch with all my team members, Zinio to read my monthly magazines subscription, Google Domain Apps for email solutions, Jajah for net telephony. And now all of them have launched their mobile web versions as well. Most of the current phones are supporting JavaScript and mobile Ajax is already a buzzword, many mobile optimized open source Ajax libraries are available, which will facilitate more rich looking mobile web applications.
Mobile-optimized sites and apps are easy to distribute, faster to release, have low cost entry, and quick to share. The native mobile apps on the other hand are being crushed by near-monopoly of operators and handset companies and fragmented market. The greed and paranoia of carriers has hurt native mobile app industry a lot. Thanks to mobile phones and OS manufacturers, who ensured that carriers always had influence over third party developers.
Let’s consider it this way, when you decide to create a mobile web application. You don`t need a nod of approval from the carrier or manufacturer, no need to get certified, no need to share revenue with the vendor, no need to beg for placement on the deck, portability problem is solved by designing 2-3 different versions. You are free from carrier, handset manufacturer, OS vendor; it’s you and the users. With mobile billing solutions coming fast, billing the users on mobile won`t be a problem in coming days. Most of the serious users are switching to flat-rate data plans, and it will be a common norm in future.
One thing I am greatly thankful to Apple is that they have forced phone companies and OS vendors to build more powerful browsers, and ship them with new handsets. Some people might point out the release of iPhone SDK is itself an argument against this write-up of mine. But I doubt if SDK is nothing but an extension/ sandbox environment for Safari.
So I will finish this write-up with the dream of seeing operators and carries as nothing but delivery pipes, and more power to the developers, who have been treated like peasant farmers by the nasty Zamindars (feudal system) a.k.a. carriers.
The past few days Twitter SMS number in India, that we depend on is down. So here’s steps to get FriendFeed on moblf going via IM/ Twitter Desktop client. People in India and other across the world can use this.
Instructions:
1. Confirm if you are configured to receive messages on IM client:
a. Log into your Twitter account and in “Add Device”, make sure that IM Devices Updates is in “ON” status and save the settings.
b. Please Switch “OFF” the mobile updates it is “ON”, this is to ensure that the IM is configured properly.
2. Go to Gtalk / any other Twitter client and in the Twitter window type HELP - Just to confirm Twitter is working on Gtalk. You will get the following response:
“Reply with what you’re doing.
‘invite’ to invite a friend.
‘follow’ to receive updates.
‘track’ to track interests.
‘whois’ for info.
‘off’ to silence.”
3. Type the following command and submit, in your Twitter chat window:
Follow moblf
This lets you follow Moblf on Twitter
4. Type the following command to ensure that Gtalk and Moblf are communicating with each other:
D moblf help
a. First you will get the following Twitter message:
“Your direct message has been sent.”
b. Next, you will get the following help information:
Direct from moblf:
Send D moblf <moblf command>
ffstart <ffusername>, <ffremotekey> - to start ff on mobile
ffget - get top 5 ff messages
ffgetn - get next 5 ff messages
More…
Reply with ‘d moblf hi.’
Direct from moblf:
ffgetus <username> - get top 5 ff messages from user
ffgetus <username>, <webservice> - get top 5 ff messages from specifc website for the user
ffsend <message> - update status on ff
Reply with ‘d moblf hi.’
5. Now that you have confirmed Twitter is working on Gtalk and you are following moblf, It’s time to setup the FriendFeed account. For this you need two things:
a. Your FriendFeed username
b. Your FriendFeed remote key: It can be found here: https://friendfeed.com/account/api
6. Next, type the following command and submit, to Activate FriendFeed on Moblf
d moblf ffstart yourffusername, yourffremotekey
a. First you will get the following Twitter message:
“Your direct message has been sent.”
b. Next, you will get a confirmation message from moblf:
“Thanks for registering for FriendFeed using MobLf. Send ‘D moblf help’ for more information. Have fun!”
c. Now your are set to use FriendFeed on Moblf
7. Start by sending
d moblf ffget
To get the latest 5 updates from your friendfeed account
8. If you get a message that says your are “not authorized” to receive messages, that indicates the details your provided with ffstart are incorrect. Type the following command to Stop FriendFeed : d moblf ffstop
After this restart FriendFeed with the ffstart command
9. To get the next 5 use the command
d moblf ffgetn
10. To post a direct message to friendfeed use the command
d moblf ffsend <your message>
11. For help on commands type
d moblf help.
Got mashed on Mashable. Thanks to Adam Ostrow. Here’s the link:Moblf: 15 Steps to Getting FriendFeed via SMS [Invites] Give us your opinion by way of comments…
Adam from mashable wrote to me few minutes ago informing that he finding it difficult to setup his FriendFeed account on moblf.
I have listed below detailed steps to setup Friendfeed on moblf, they are little too detailed just to ensure you can setup it without trouble.
Please follow them and you should be fine, i am available on IM nandini.hirianniah@gmail.com for any further help.
Instructions
1. Confirm if your phone is setup to use twitter over SMS Text Messaging. If not please goto your account on www.twitter.com, click on “add device”, add your phone number and verify with the code as mentioned on the add device page
2. Once your account is setup make sure on that the device updates are turned on (this is also on add device page)
3. Test twitter connectivity on phone
a. Send command “help” to twitter shortcode “40404″
b. You should receive a reply form twitter with the following contents
“Reply with what you’re doing.
‘invite’ to invite a friend.
‘follow’ to receive updates.
‘track’ to track interests.
‘whois’ for info.
‘off’ to silence.”
4. Now that your twitter account is tested on phone, send command “follow moblf” to 40404 (or send the same command on your desktop twitter client: gtalk or twirl). You will receive a reply from twitter with following contents:
“You’ll receive a message every time moblf updates. To silence, send ‘off moblf’. For more commands, send ‘help’.”
5. Now time to set up the ff account, you will need two things
a. Friendfeed username
b. FriendFeed remote key: It can be found here: https://friendfeed.com/account/api
6. Send command “d moblf ffstart friendfeedusername,yourremotekey” to 40404 (or send the same command on your desktop twitter client: gtalk or twirl)
7. You will receive a confirmation back from moblf
8. Now you are all set to start getting your friendfeed updates on your phone via SMS or on your IM/twitter client
9. First to test send “d moblf ffhelp” to 40404 (or send the same command on your desktop twitter client: gtalk or twirl).
10. You will receive help contents from moblf
11. Now send “d moblf ffget” to 40404 (or send the same command on your desktop twitter client: gtalk or twirl).
12. You will receive 5 most recent updates from your FriendFeed stream
13. For next 5 send “d moblf ffgetn”
14. For posting a message to FriendFeed send “d moblf ffsend <your message>”
15. For more please also visit: http://www.moblf.com/help.html and read question “moblf list of commands”
Guest post: Ravi Jitani, is based in Nairobi and works as IT Program Manager, Aureos Kenya Managers Ltd.
Mobility is a synonym to connectivity in our times and also the ability to stay mobile for extended periods of time. We have seen an astronomical growth in number of people using mobiles for voice com
munications as it is a boon to business people who are constantly on the move. Mobility now has a new dimension which lets us transmit data and run sophisticated applications which has given birth to new lifestyle called “Mobile Life”. This new lifestyle (unlike its grown up mature cousin “computer”) cuts across generations and has been embraced by the rich and the not so rich.
Well imagine as a bank if you have to compete with telecom companies that provide mobile to mobile cash transfer services, to retain the small savers and the casual workers! I am sure you will agree that “mobile life” has truly arrived.
In Kenya a product called “M-PESA” a cell phone to cell phone cash transfer service has been a huge hit in the rural economy where there is a serious lack of banking infrastructure and leaves people with virtually no options to transfer money. This product lets people load money on their cell phones and then use it as a virtual wallet to transfer money or buy products. This is the new life style embraced by the millions of people some of whom have no access to luxuries of life and yet are able to able to do transactions in the comfort of their home while a majority of us are still waiting for our token number to be called?
Welcome to Mobile Life… what’s your opinion, let us know in comments.
Guest post by Sameer Guglani, serial entrepreneur and mobile industry veteran. Sameer is an advisor to moblf
Sarah at Readwriteweb has a written a very good post titled “Enterprise 2.0 To Become a $4.6 Billion Industry By 2013”. I am a firm believer in this trend and have been watching it gather speed at my companies as well as at other companies I am familiar with. Enterprises are increasingly open to invest in tools of this nature.
In this context platforms like moblf will become a very important part of the Enterprise 2.0 solutions as they will allow enterprise solutions to be extended for anytime/anywhere availability, via SMS text messaging. And this connectivity will include all employees, even ones who don’t have regular internet or PC access as part of the job.
Employee facing use cases:
Customer facing use cases:
What do you guys think about this trens? What can be other use cases where Enterprises can benefit via integration with mobile, especially via SMS text messaging? Lets us know in comments…
image: detail of installation by Bronwyn Lace