- Posts tagged mobile monday
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Footage from the recent @bluevia tour to the US @momosv @momoseattle
Recently the BlueVia team travelled over to San Francisco and Seattle for a week of evangelism, developer out reach, and business development meetings. Below is a montage of our talks at Mobile Monday Silicon Valley and Seattle.
Stay tuned to @bluevia for more news on some interesting developments coming off the back of the trip.
Open Office Hours & Mobile Monday London
We are pleased to announce that on the first Monday of every month the BlueVia team will operate Open Office Hours at TechHub which is right in the heart of London’s famed Silicon Roundabout area of Shoreditch. We kick off on the 4th July.
If you are not familiar with Open Office Hours, basically you can book a 20 minute slot with the team to come and chat. It’s informal and friendly. We are happy to chat about BlueVia, help you get up and running, or simply chat about your product or ideas, offer advice, and connect you to the hundreds of people and companies we know across tech and mobile.
To meet, simply book one of the available slots using http://ohours.org/BlueVia
At the end of the day we will then be travelling to Mobile Monday London to attend “The State of the Developer Nation’ which we are sponsoring.
Mobile Monday London Write Up – “200,000 apps, where’s mine?”
MoMo London 19/07/10
Opening up was Mike Kirkup, Head of Developer Relations at RIM, who were sponsoring the evening. Mike touched on the theme of “super apps” and promoted the current Blackberry Super App contest with $1.5 million in prize money available, plus take to market support for the winners. Check the contest out here.
Next up was the panel segment to provide advice and insights into the topic for the evening
The panel was chaired by Ben Scott Robinson, creative director at We Love Mobile and included:
Chair: Ben Scott-Robinson - Creative Director, We Love Mobile
Chris Bourke - MD, Mobext
Dave Burrows - Director of R&D Interchange Group
Alyssa Tisne - VP Strategic Partnerships, 7Digital
Tony Pearce - CEO and co-founder, TeePee Games
Eli Camilleri - Asssociate, Vision Mobie
Mike Kirkup - BlackBerry
(Updated: thanks to Adam Cohen Rose for complete panel details, check out his write up here)
The first question posed was “why apps when mobile web is pretty much ubiquitous?”
Chris was first to respond. He argued that his agency was using mobile apps to compensate for a lack of speed on mobile connections to deliver a better customer experience. He also made the point that an app gave them a much greater ability to customise the UI and better represent his client’s brands than a mobile browser.
Alyssa was first to reference the “A word”, saying Apple had set the gold standard in music (7 Digital are a music company). She said 7 Digital preferred the browser route for their music store as it was ubiquitous.
Mike tabled that actually much of this current trend towards apps was driven by customer expectation rather than smart technology choices. He cited brands simply publishing shortcuts in Blackberry World seeing uplifts in traffic of 30 – 50% simply because it delivered an app like experience. i.e. it gets your brand (app icon) on the top deck of the handset for instance access. (a shortcut is an icon, which when clicked simply opens the mobile browser and takes you to a mobile website)
Eli highlighted that it is unlikely your entire potential audience is going to be on one or two platforms so choosing apps over web is going to limit your commercial potential, so you have to balance customer experience with business objectives.
This brought the second question around the use of customer demographics. Eli made the telling point that actually there is no evidence that developers are doing anything with demographics or other marketing techniques. The recently published Vision Mobile report Developer Economics 2010, available for free here, thanks to Telefonica’s sponsorship, plug plug!, highlighted that the vast majority of developers still limit their “market research” to testing their app out with friends and colleagues. This is not a long term strategy for success.
Tony highlighted that historically the mobile operator was the shop keeper that kept control of how many apps were offered to its customers. With the rise of the apps stores this limitation has gone, but ironically now the noise issue is becoming a major problem for developers with limited marketing budgets / skills.
Dave made the point that in B2B app distribution, often the users (the employees) are not the purchasers.
Chris highlighted the time sensitivity around demographic data, citing an anecdotal example of seeing more and more kids carrying iPhones, which demographic data does not show. He also cited the case of shared device usage in the home (e.g. siblings both using an iPhone for gaming) These examples present an opportunity for real time network enablers that can tell you what devices are being used, and by who, at that precise point in time.
Mike described the recent success of Blackberry penetrating into the youth market. I think he was over modest to say this was not planned. Blackberry exec’s I know where talking about the need to diversify into consumer 2 – 3 years ago. He put the success down to a simple, well executed proposition: Communication. Blackberry’s initial success was opening better communications for CEO’s. Now Blackberry is enabling better consumer communication via Facebook, Twitter and Blackberry Messenger, signalling a shift from SMS as the primary youth communication method.
Chris then tackled apps as a marketing tool. It was clear there are many brands asking for apps without understanding anything about the mobile space, e.g. the limited reach of an iPhone only play. Chris put this down to:
1) Wanting association (no matter how tenuous) with a cool brand e.g. Apple
2) Seeking a PR opportunity
Tony used Facebook to highlight the discoverability issues. Facebook has 35,000 games and 250,000 apps yet nobody can name more than a dozen. Only the brands and publishers that have the marketing muscle are driving visibility. Tony’s new company Teepee Games aims to address this by aggregating recommended games for consumers.
Eli made the point that none of these issues are new, and are no different to the challenges facing FMCG brands fighting over shelf space in a supermarket like Tesco. The Developer Economics 2010 report highlighted developers were willing to pay for premium store placement, a practice well established in traditional bricks and mortar retailing. Eli also raised a good point that paying for placement may only get you so far. There is still the consumer confidence & trust issue of unknown brands.
Alyssa highlighted that open partnerships was a key element of the marketing mix. 7 Digital has driven downloads by integrating with other partners like Last FM and Shazam. Building relationships with other companies and network operators can help overcome the visibility issues.
Building on Eli’s point Mike stated these issues were not new, but just new people experiencing them for the first time.
Dave made the point that the most valuable real estate was the handset itself, and good old fashioned networking with the mobile operators pays off. Preload is vital (see Shazam as a case in point)
Chris talked about the overall package of actions like PR. Their approach is to create talkability to push the app into the Top 25 of the app store, then let organic downloads drive growth. There is a second hit of PR to promote the app once it drops out of the Top 25.
Eli highlighted an example of good integrated communications where the Royal Society of Arts have their iPhone app pushed by the girl selling tickets at the entrance desk, contrasting that to Selfridges who make no in store reference to their app at all.
Mike commented that RIM have been surprised by the rapid growth of Blackberry Messenger (BBM), with some customers going into retail stores asking for BBM without knowing it comes on a Blackberry device.
When asked about “free” as a marketing tactic Eli commented that makes sense if the app is an extension of your core business e.g. Nike +, but not if your business is the app itself. The point was made that it is very difficult to convert free customers to pay, and freemuim models need to have clear value in the up sell to drive conversion.
Tony made an interesting point contrasting the mindset of Nokia users with iPhone users. Nokia users don’t baulk at paying £5 for a mobile game, where as iPhone users recoil at the thought of a 59p app. Is this an example of a mobile native mindset vs. a web native mindset?
Automated App porting tools came up, and Chris said in his experience they were good for heavy lifting and doing volume, but to ensure his clients brands were correctly represented they always do bespoke work saying the porting solutions always breakdown at the edges. Despite having an employee of Grapple ask a challenging question from the audience only seconds before, they suddenly became invisible when offered the chance to respond to the criticism which led to a beautiful awkward silence that Ricky Gervais would have been proud of.
IMO the best piece of insight from the night came from Chris when asked how developers on a shoe string budget could drive visibility. “Cause trouble” was the answer. He cited You Tube’s early rise to prominence by liberally infringing copyright which didn’t seem to deter Google from buying them. Do something sexy or do something that will get you noticed.
For me the evening highlighted a tech fuelled market approaching commercial maturity. There is no escaping the basic fact that if you are operating in a competitive environment, trying to make yourself heard to your target audience, there has to be a conscious decision to invest in marketing. You simply can’t ignore that fact or attempt to blame the app store owners for somehow letting you down otherwise you will fail.
I keep getting a sense that some developers are still seeking a magic / free solution to their marketing issues. This marketing investment doesn’t need to be scarily expensive, and can be totally outsourced if necessary. Still, it was encouraging to see the debate starting to move away from a purely technology feature led conversation, to at least considering the need to do more than the “throw it against a wall and see if it sticks” approach so commonly seen. Despite “marketing” being an almost taboo word in some developer circles, maybe tonight signalled the beginning of something new...
You can follow the Twitter stream from the event here.
Mobile Monday London, 9th March, Write Up
A quick wrap from last night Mobile Monday London Event, which posed the question “What have Mobile Operators done for us?”As I was speaking and on the panel I didn’t have a chance to write many notes, but thankfully a few audience members did, and @ribot recorded the presentations for prosperity.
James Parton presents O2 Litmus at Momo London from ribot on Vimeo.
Terence Eden of Vodaone on Operators and Operands, a Love Story - MoMoLondon from ribot on Vimeo.Check these out for reviews of the evening:Pudding Relations
Expanding HorizonsYou can view my extended 12” remix O2 Litmus presentation hereI felt the evening went well.There is always a degree of frustration in the room when the Operators get up on stage, and I totally understand why. In the past we haven’t done enough to help the developer community, and it is understandable there is a healthy dose of cynicism when Operators claim they are listening and trying to change for the better.You can read some of that sentiment here.I certainly welcome the opportunity to have a more open dialogue between Operators and the Mobile Monday community, and I think we should have a follow up session including some of the other Mobile Operators, especially Orange who invest heavily in Orange Partner.I think in the main the O2 Litmus message was well received, but you tell me ;-)When I set out with the concept we deliberately spent a lot of time researching what was wrong with existing Operator developer communities, trying to get under the hood of the frustrations of trying to work with us.The fact that I was getting similar questions, and may be a sense that the O2 Litmus story was too good to be true, reinforced to me that the insight we gained must have been on the money, because I genuinely believe O2 Litmus can be the breath of fresh air the community has been crying out for.However O2 Litmus is not the silver bullet to all the problems the world has to offer. We need Developers to join to tell us how O2 Litmus should develop. We can’t hope to get it right without the community taking an ownership role. As I mentioned last night, our thoughts on the O2 Litmus roadmap and API evolution are all public domain in the forums, so please feel free to join and engage in the debate.My key take out from last night was there is still much to do to reduce the fragmentation in the mobile industry. We as Operators need to do much more to collaborate more closely and reduce the complexity and pain of creating successful mobile applications, and successful businesses.The green shoots of this new thinking are appearing in initiatives like the GSMA OneAPI project and I will be taking a proactive stance with my colleagues at the other Mobile Operators to put some energy in bringing us closer together. The days of wall gardens are gone, and I don’t intend to be competing with other Mobile Operators for Developers, O2 Litmus is not about that.It was great to hear Betavine is now promoted from Vodafone Live, I think that is a big step forward, and you should check out their Widget competition where £20,000 is up for grabs.So a positive evening I felt, and hopefully a platform to build an ongoing dialogue with the Mobile Monday Community.What did you think of the event?If you have any questions that didn’t get answered last night, feel free to contact me via Twitter, LinkedIn or james@o2litmus.info
James Parton presents O2 Litmus at Momo London from ribot on Vimeo.
Terence Eden of Vodaone on Operators and Operands, a Love Story - MoMoLondon from ribot on Vimeo.Check these out for reviews of the evening:Pudding Relations
Expanding HorizonsYou can view my extended 12” remix O2 Litmus presentation hereI felt the evening went well.There is always a degree of frustration in the room when the Operators get up on stage, and I totally understand why. In the past we haven’t done enough to help the developer community, and it is understandable there is a healthy dose of cynicism when Operators claim they are listening and trying to change for the better.You can read some of that sentiment here.I certainly welcome the opportunity to have a more open dialogue between Operators and the Mobile Monday community, and I think we should have a follow up session including some of the other Mobile Operators, especially Orange who invest heavily in Orange Partner.I think in the main the O2 Litmus message was well received, but you tell me ;-)When I set out with the concept we deliberately spent a lot of time researching what was wrong with existing Operator developer communities, trying to get under the hood of the frustrations of trying to work with us.The fact that I was getting similar questions, and may be a sense that the O2 Litmus story was too good to be true, reinforced to me that the insight we gained must have been on the money, because I genuinely believe O2 Litmus can be the breath of fresh air the community has been crying out for.However O2 Litmus is not the silver bullet to all the problems the world has to offer. We need Developers to join to tell us how O2 Litmus should develop. We can’t hope to get it right without the community taking an ownership role. As I mentioned last night, our thoughts on the O2 Litmus roadmap and API evolution are all public domain in the forums, so please feel free to join and engage in the debate.My key take out from last night was there is still much to do to reduce the fragmentation in the mobile industry. We as Operators need to do much more to collaborate more closely and reduce the complexity and pain of creating successful mobile applications, and successful businesses.The green shoots of this new thinking are appearing in initiatives like the GSMA OneAPI project and I will be taking a proactive stance with my colleagues at the other Mobile Operators to put some energy in bringing us closer together. The days of wall gardens are gone, and I don’t intend to be competing with other Mobile Operators for Developers, O2 Litmus is not about that.It was great to hear Betavine is now promoted from Vodafone Live, I think that is a big step forward, and you should check out their Widget competition where £20,000 is up for grabs.So a positive evening I felt, and hopefully a platform to build an ongoing dialogue with the Mobile Monday Community.What did you think of the event?If you have any questions that didn’t get answered last night, feel free to contact me via Twitter, LinkedIn or james@o2litmus.info
MWC Day 1
Notable news / announcements today:Nokia to launch Ovi App Store:
http://www.mobile-ent.biz/news/32620/MWC-Nokia-unveils-Ovi-Store-app-storeO2 Litmus announces partnership with Mob4Hire:
http://www.mobile-ent.biz/news/32621/O2-customers-to-trial-Litmus-app-storeNokia & Adobe offer $10m Flash Developer Fund:
http://www.mobile-ent.biz/news/32634/Adobe-and-Nokia-establish-10m-Flash-fundOrange Extend App Store:
http://www.mobile-ent.biz/news/32661/MWC-Orange-extends-App-Shop-adds-widgetsMicrosoft unveils Windows Marketplace for Mobile:
http://www.mobile-ent.biz/news/32658/MWC-Microsoft-unveils-Windows-Marketplace-for-MobileMost of today was travelling for me, but I managed to hot foot it across to the Mobile Monday Peer Awards, as O2 Litmus was proud to be one of the sponsors, held at the beautiful Palau Musica Catalana.Basically each of the 68 MobileMonday Chapters (cities) select their local startup nominee which are filtered down to 20 finalists who present on stage in a 3 minute pitch.The judging panel, seen below comprised of various industry experts including @unpocodetodo from Telefonica R&D. The dreaded three minute countdown clock: The winner "in spite of legal concerns" was Popcatcher who enable personal recording of songs from FM radio broadcasts for storage on the phone as MP3 tracks. On top of that their software also automatically edits out any advertising and DJ chatter. Impressive if it works and is legal!For a good round up check out @mikebutcher summary here: http://www.techcrunch.com/2009/02/16/mobile-startups-whittled-down-to-the-last-five-in-barcelona/Whilst the judging was taking place we all mingled in the bar and I got to catch up with the @mob4hire guys, the guys from Soonr, GetJar, amongst others. It was rough to hear from the Californian guys just how tough financing is at the moment, but the silver lining seems to be if you can make it through this, then your business really has great potential for the up turn.I must invest in a Netbook so I can do this stuff from the event rather than going back to my hotel to fire up the laptop, still good excuse for a early night in preparation for a busy day.Hopefully my good intentions to post each day will continue, if not apologies in advance, and follow me on twitter @jamesparton for more immediate thoughts / observations.
http://www.mobile-ent.biz/news/32620/MWC-Nokia-unveils-Ovi-Store-app-storeO2 Litmus announces partnership with Mob4Hire:
http://www.mobile-ent.biz/news/32621/O2-customers-to-trial-Litmus-app-storeNokia & Adobe offer $10m Flash Developer Fund:
http://www.mobile-ent.biz/news/32634/Adobe-and-Nokia-establish-10m-Flash-fundOrange Extend App Store:
http://www.mobile-ent.biz/news/32661/MWC-Orange-extends-App-Shop-adds-widgetsMicrosoft unveils Windows Marketplace for Mobile:
http://www.mobile-ent.biz/news/32658/MWC-Microsoft-unveils-Windows-Marketplace-for-MobileMost of today was travelling for me, but I managed to hot foot it across to the Mobile Monday Peer Awards, as O2 Litmus was proud to be one of the sponsors, held at the beautiful Palau Musica Catalana.Basically each of the 68 MobileMonday Chapters (cities) select their local startup nominee which are filtered down to 20 finalists who present on stage in a 3 minute pitch.The judging panel, seen below comprised of various industry experts including @unpocodetodo from Telefonica R&D. The dreaded three minute countdown clock: The winner "in spite of legal concerns" was Popcatcher who enable personal recording of songs from FM radio broadcasts for storage on the phone as MP3 tracks. On top of that their software also automatically edits out any advertising and DJ chatter. Impressive if it works and is legal!For a good round up check out @mikebutcher summary here: http://www.techcrunch.com/2009/02/16/mobile-startups-whittled-down-to-the-last-five-in-barcelona/Whilst the judging was taking place we all mingled in the bar and I got to catch up with the @mob4hire guys, the guys from Soonr, GetJar, amongst others. It was rough to hear from the Californian guys just how tough financing is at the moment, but the silver lining seems to be if you can make it through this, then your business really has great potential for the up turn.I must invest in a Netbook so I can do this stuff from the event rather than going back to my hotel to fire up the laptop, still good excuse for a early night in preparation for a busy day.Hopefully my good intentions to post each day will continue, if not apologies in advance, and follow me on twitter @jamesparton for more immediate thoughts / observations.
Mobile Monday London, 10th Feb, Write Up
I had an interesting time down at Mobile Monday London last night.It was held at the CBI Conference Centre (base of the Centrepoint tower by Tottenham Court Road tube station).The evening followed the standard MoMo format of short 10 minute presentations, followed by a panel debate, Q&A, and networking.The panel was made up of:Samuel Sweet - Ikivo
Nick Allot - OMTP BONDI
Kevin Smith - Vodafone
Christian Sejersen - Mozilla
Francois Daoust - W3C
Graham Thomas - T-MobileI posted various titbits live from the room via Twitter last night (see my feed here) and below is a quick summary of my thoughts.The evening was billed as “'The changing landscape of the mobile web'.Kevin from Vodafone was first up to run us through the OneAPI initiative from the GSMA.The goal of the project makes absolute sense – to deliver a standard way for 3rd parties to connect into Mobile Operator infrastructure and services. Stop the fragmentation, and make developers lives easier by reducing time spent on integration to allow more time to be devoted to innovation.At the moment all the Mobile Operators around the world offer access into their networks via API’s, but in a non standard way. This increases the cost and complexity of developing an application that can be universally accessed across all operators in one territory.Due to a history of acquisition in the Mobile industry, often the API’s from the same Operator Group (e.g. Orange, Vodafone, Telefónica) differ from country to country compounding the problem. Therefore for any developer with international ambitions the complexity of the challenge dramatically increases.In the current scope of the project are enablers like messaging, user profile & charging.The other important point Kevin made was by getting this right the Mobile industry will attract in new non mobile developers. As the web world and mobile world’s collide, projects like OneAPI help reduce the barriers for cross fertilisation. This has to be great news from a business perspective (more opportunity) and from a customer perspective (more innovation)The one big question for me that was not answered by Kevin’s pitch was how the required investment from the Operators will be financed?The business folks inside the Operators will be looking at the money required to build out these standardised API’s, and ask the simple question “where is the return on investment”.The application / long tail space is notoriously difficult to forecast from a revenue perspective. I know I’ve tried!!In such a nascent market who really knows where the revenues will flow from and who will be the winners and losers. Let’s hope we have some fresh thinking from the people holding the purse strings and there is a philosophy of speculating to accumulate. I’ll be dropping Kevin a line to find out if he has the answer!The OneAPI project will have a high profile at next weeks Mobile World Congress so I suggest you seek them out. Check out the OneAPI Seminar on Tuesday 17th at 9:30am: (GSMA Seminar Theatre, GSMA Pavilion. Hall 7, Stand 7P01)Following Kevin we heard from OMTP, Mozilla and IKivo. These presentations were quite technical in nature and focused on the need to develop to standards to open up the mobile opportunity.This is always a thorny subject. Innovation always drives speed to market and features at the expense of interoperability. Nick from OMTP commented that over 20 companies had gone off and developed 20 different flavours of widget.Ikivo claimed a joint project named “T-Omnia” with Samsung and SK Telecom of Korea for a new device UI based on widget technology that replaced the native Windows Mobile UI had increased sales of the device by 300%Christian showed the Alpha 2 version of the “Fennec” browser, basically Firefox for Mobile. It looked very nice on a high end touch screen. Would have been nice to see it on a mid range device. Watch the video here:
Fennec Alpha 2 Overview from Madhava Enros on Vimeo.The Q&A session dealt a lot of the issues around standards, the speed it takes these things to come together, and the various roles of all the parties involved. W3C was frequently referred to as the “Mother Ship”The most pertinent question from the floor was from an exasperated developer along the lines of “all this talk of standards is fine, but tell me how I can make money from widgets, and I do not mean advertising?”For me that succinctly summarised the overall problem with the evening – lots of tech talk (which I guess is understandable) but no one attempting to tackle the business agenda.This should have been Graham’s opportunity to step and reassure, however his main point was one of getting more people to use mobile internet services first before working out specific business models for widgets and apps. That sounds great for an Operator (more use = more data traffic) but unless T-Mobile are proposing to share that traffic revenue with the developers it doesn’t answer the question.We seem to forget that without a commercial framework to foster 3rd party innovation which presents a real opportunity for the developer to make money; the ideas will dry up, new products dry up, end user demand for data and services dries up.With that challenge looking for a solution, let me leave you with the O2 Litmus URL ;-)
Nick Allot - OMTP BONDI
Kevin Smith - Vodafone
Christian Sejersen - Mozilla
Francois Daoust - W3C
Graham Thomas - T-MobileI posted various titbits live from the room via Twitter last night (see my feed here) and below is a quick summary of my thoughts.The evening was billed as “'The changing landscape of the mobile web'.Kevin from Vodafone was first up to run us through the OneAPI initiative from the GSMA.The goal of the project makes absolute sense – to deliver a standard way for 3rd parties to connect into Mobile Operator infrastructure and services. Stop the fragmentation, and make developers lives easier by reducing time spent on integration to allow more time to be devoted to innovation.At the moment all the Mobile Operators around the world offer access into their networks via API’s, but in a non standard way. This increases the cost and complexity of developing an application that can be universally accessed across all operators in one territory.Due to a history of acquisition in the Mobile industry, often the API’s from the same Operator Group (e.g. Orange, Vodafone, Telefónica) differ from country to country compounding the problem. Therefore for any developer with international ambitions the complexity of the challenge dramatically increases.In the current scope of the project are enablers like messaging, user profile & charging.The other important point Kevin made was by getting this right the Mobile industry will attract in new non mobile developers. As the web world and mobile world’s collide, projects like OneAPI help reduce the barriers for cross fertilisation. This has to be great news from a business perspective (more opportunity) and from a customer perspective (more innovation)The one big question for me that was not answered by Kevin’s pitch was how the required investment from the Operators will be financed?The business folks inside the Operators will be looking at the money required to build out these standardised API’s, and ask the simple question “where is the return on investment”.The application / long tail space is notoriously difficult to forecast from a revenue perspective. I know I’ve tried!!In such a nascent market who really knows where the revenues will flow from and who will be the winners and losers. Let’s hope we have some fresh thinking from the people holding the purse strings and there is a philosophy of speculating to accumulate. I’ll be dropping Kevin a line to find out if he has the answer!The OneAPI project will have a high profile at next weeks Mobile World Congress so I suggest you seek them out. Check out the OneAPI Seminar on Tuesday 17th at 9:30am: (GSMA Seminar Theatre, GSMA Pavilion. Hall 7, Stand 7P01)Following Kevin we heard from OMTP, Mozilla and IKivo. These presentations were quite technical in nature and focused on the need to develop to standards to open up the mobile opportunity.This is always a thorny subject. Innovation always drives speed to market and features at the expense of interoperability. Nick from OMTP commented that over 20 companies had gone off and developed 20 different flavours of widget.Ikivo claimed a joint project named “T-Omnia” with Samsung and SK Telecom of Korea for a new device UI based on widget technology that replaced the native Windows Mobile UI had increased sales of the device by 300%Christian showed the Alpha 2 version of the “Fennec” browser, basically Firefox for Mobile. It looked very nice on a high end touch screen. Would have been nice to see it on a mid range device. Watch the video here:
Fennec Alpha 2 Overview from Madhava Enros on Vimeo.The Q&A session dealt a lot of the issues around standards, the speed it takes these things to come together, and the various roles of all the parties involved. W3C was frequently referred to as the “Mother Ship”The most pertinent question from the floor was from an exasperated developer along the lines of “all this talk of standards is fine, but tell me how I can make money from widgets, and I do not mean advertising?”For me that succinctly summarised the overall problem with the evening – lots of tech talk (which I guess is understandable) but no one attempting to tackle the business agenda.This should have been Graham’s opportunity to step and reassure, however his main point was one of getting more people to use mobile internet services first before working out specific business models for widgets and apps. That sounds great for an Operator (more use = more data traffic) but unless T-Mobile are proposing to share that traffic revenue with the developers it doesn’t answer the question.We seem to forget that without a commercial framework to foster 3rd party innovation which presents a real opportunity for the developer to make money; the ideas will dry up, new products dry up, end user demand for data and services dries up.With that challenge looking for a solution, let me leave you with the O2 Litmus URL ;-)
February Going's On...
Firstly thanks for stopping by. I've finally got a round to setting up a personal blog to try and aggragrate stuff I'm guest writing on other sites, and to provide a home to various personal ramblings and nuggets I pick up along the way.For those of you that don't know me I'm the creative force behind O2 Litmus and as such I have spent the last 18 months talking to, and working with, some great people. Now we have the thing built and launched, 2009 is going to be busy spreading the word and helping the developer community make some money, good news huh? :-)Mobile World Congress in Barcelona dominates the month, and O2 Litmus will have a visible presence down there, below is my upcoming schedule so it would be great to meet and chat...February 2009:2nd: Mobile Monday, London16th - 19th: Mobile World Congress, O2 Litmus on Telefonica stand (Hall 8 stand 8B185)
16th: O2 Litmus sponsors Mobile Monday Peer Awards
17th: Speaking at the The Business of Mobile 2.0 Conference (14:40)
18th: Speaking at an Oracle Breakfast Briefing, RSVP by e-mail to anders.lundell@oracle.com
19th: O2 Litmus sponsors WIP Jam26th: Oracle Webinar (details tbc)March 2009:5th: NavTeq WebinarMore soon...
16th: O2 Litmus sponsors Mobile Monday Peer Awards
17th: Speaking at the The Business of Mobile 2.0 Conference (14:40)
18th: Speaking at an Oracle Breakfast Briefing, RSVP by e-mail to anders.lundell@oracle.com
19th: O2 Litmus sponsors WIP Jam26th: Oracle Webinar (details tbc)March 2009:5th: NavTeq WebinarMore soon...




