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Wednesday, March 23, 2005
Bus. Std: The Many Uses of Mobile Phones
My latest column in Business Standard: The innovation and growth on the mobile phones front is astonishing. The top-end phones available now have the processing power and storage available in desktop computers from just 4-5 years ago. Little wonder then that 2004 saw 674 million phones being bought, and estimates for 2005 stand at 730 million. The mobile phone is rapidly becoming the uber-device – the one device that seems to have it all and becomes even more indispensable than it is now. Mobile phones have already started functioning as more than just communications devices. Mobiles serve as watches and alarm clocks. Even with the limited free games that come with basic phones, they are already good for “time-pass.” They can also function as calculators. In unfamiliar neighbourhoods, they tell us where we are. The address book and contacts list on phones is our social interface. Without the phone, many of us would be quite lost in connecting with other people! The calendar function on the mobile phones can help us track our lives. Phones can also function as radios. For some, the mobile phone also becomes a notepad – send an SMS to oneself and make it a reminder service. Owners also have tended to customise phones – with their own ringtones, themes and wallpapers. This is just for starters. Consider what some of the more advanced mobile phones are also doing: Ramesh Jain, professor at University of California, Irivine, wrote on his weblog: “Mobile phones are becoming very powerful and are likely to become a dominant device for CCC (communication, computing and content).” So, the phones of tomorrow will be remote controls for our life. They will come with bigger, better keyboards and displays – even though there are practical limitations on how big a device we will carry. Networks are becoming faster, too. And the device that was once a replacement for the fixed-line phone will occupy an even greater role in our lives. Countries like Japan and South Korea already lead the way in having multi-purpose mobile phones. China is following and India is not far behind. Consider some of the recent announcements at Cebit. A Slashdot reader wrote: “Samsung [is] showing off a new cell phone which runs on Microsoft's Windows Mobile operating system which features a built-in hard drive. The SGH-I300 will offer 3GB of storage which allows you to store up to 1,000 songs on it for playback through the music player. The 3GB hard drive is similar to the type of hard drive that is found in Apple's Mini iPod. These 1-inch drives with very low power requirements, are ideal for cell phones and other mobile devices.” News.com wrote about two of the announcements at Cebit: “Motorola is demonstrating its 3G Motorola V1150 phone in Hannover. The sleek phone will come with an integrated 2-megapixel camera, two-way video calling and a new Motorola ticker technology called Screen3 that streams news and entertainment from Motorola...Sony Ericsson is showing off the W800 phone, the first Walkman- branded cell phone. The handset comes with a digital-audio player, FM radio tuner and 2-megapixel camera. The W800 will have 38MB of free memory for music and images.” Mobile phones are morphing – to the point where voice is just incidental. They are becoming, what George Gilder has called, teleputers.
PCs, Internet and Literacy
Atanu Dey writes:
Deeshaa (Rural Development)
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supporting evidence, via the august 26th issue of the economist, in an article entitled 'Education and economic growth': "The team identified a clear and significant association between investments in human capital in each period and a country's subsequent growth and labour productivity. Specifically, a rise of 1% in literacy scores relative to the international average is associated with an eventual 2.5% relative rise in labour productivity and a 1.5% rise in GDP per head." Posted by jesus henry christosOnline Deals, Coupons with cash back and donation to charity Shan's blog Deals, Coupons at one place Posted by Shan
Story Books Come Alive
Technology Review writes:
Vertical Search
Om Malik writes about the buzz: "So what is vertical search? It is a specialized search engine that mines data for one narrow niche of the market place. Say jobs or travel. Or even high end real estate. Because the data sources are so fragmented, there seems to be an opportunity to massage the data and present it in a manner that is simple to use and easy to consume. Sort of meta search for niches. The main reason this is supposed to work is that the two older advertising models - cost per thousand (aka banner ads) and cost per click are too inefficient and fraught with fraud-related risk. Vertical search can offer a more focused audience, and thus increase the efficiency of ads on the search engine. It also presents a new kind of advertising opportunity - lets call it cost per action. If you can generate leads, or say have some sign-up for an email newsletter or a RSS feed, you suddenly have created much higher value, and thus that click is more valuable."
Business Week mentions BlogStreet
In its article entitled "Search, the Next Generation", Business Week has a one-sentence reference to BlogStreet: "nother new search engine, BlogStreet.com, looks for blogs similar to the ones you're already reading."
TECH TALK: The Future of Search: Discovery
Who doesn’t love the joy that comes with discovery?! We are all so delighted when we find something different from what we started looking for. There is an element of serendipity in there. Technology promises to make this process easier – look at the Amazon book recommendations based on our purchase history. The same holds true for information. Today, discovery comes either via the search process as we sometimes end up finding things “accidentally” or via recommendations from our social network. Bloggers have made the process of discovery easier – by tracking people we know who have certain interests that overlap with us, we rely on their search processes for recommendation. One such application that is aiding in the discovery process is Rojo. Technology Review: Rojo has an RSS feed search function and gives readers the ability to flag stories they find important or interesting. But in enabling users to draw on the insights of friends, family, colleagues, and others in their social networks, Rojo departs from most of the competition. Rojo users can invite others to sign up for Rojo accounts; those accounts are linked, much like the accounts on the popular website Friendster. Rojo users can see what RSS feeds the members of their networks are reading and which stories they are flagging. Network popularity also affects the ranking of results when the user searches RSS feeds. “We all depend on our community for content discovery,” says Chris Alden, Rojo’s cofounder and CEO. “Any successful media service has to tap into that.” News.com: Like Google's PageRank algorithm and other search engine technologies, Rojo examines the link structure of the so-called blogosphere in order to call attention to blog items and feeds that have proved popular with other readers. Along the same lines, it follows e-commerce sites like Amazon.com in recommending related feeds. And like social networking sites such as Friendster, Rojo narrows down the community of blog readers to those within a user-defined network of friends and associates. As more and more of our interests and actions are available on centralised servers, the process of discovery will become easier – not just discovery of content, but also discovery of other people with similar interests. In a sense, the information dashboards have to build upon the social networking sites – what our friends and family say means a lot more to us than what someone else says. This creates another layer of search – we can view the world in a series of concentric circles which expand the sphere of search and discovery. We start with what we know and our subscriptions. Next comes the flow of events which match the tags that we have set. Then comes the results of discovery in our social network. And finally comes the big wide world indexed by search engines. This funneling of information is what we use all the time in the real world. The technologies and building blocks now exist to do something similar in cyberspace. The challenge lies in the interfaces that we create to make this process simple. Tomorrow: Interfaces Related Entries: [All]TECH TALK: The Future of Search: Memex [April 8, 2005] TECH TALK: The Future of Search: Information Marketplaces [April 7, 2005] TECH TALK: The Future of Search: The Wider View [April 6, 2005] TECH TALK: The Future of Search: MyToday [April 5, 2005] TECH TALK: The Future of Search: RSS to OPML [April 4, 2005]
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There's one more aspect of mobile phones that we tend to overlook in the flurry of eat-your-heart-out features that they sport: mobile phones are seriously rugged, making them so much more comfortable to use. I can drop my mobile from 5 feet (hate to, of course) and the screen won't need to be replaced. Try that with most computers.
Posted by ArunMobile Phones are going through an innovation phase which to me looks just like what the PC or the web went through. It looks like a bigger convergence is occurring in the mobile sector. But there are still lot many questions to be answered. What is there for the end user ? He still feels very naive about the whole stuff.
Networks to me cause a ripple affect just like Internet caused to the PC. This hasn't occurred yet on the mobile segment. Is it just a matter of time when mobile network will show its effect or we are looking forward towards next innovation in technology ?
Posted by Sunil GoyalThe mobile phone development is just one of those fad things ( which many call the vow effect for consumers) that end users associate with status, utility and functional value.
All the features mentioned in the article are variables in determining the price of the handset/service.
Phone may have emails but need GPRS/Net connection to get mails. MMS client may be inbuilt but carrier may charge x bucks to send one. Same for music/videos.
Working for a telcom giant involved in data application network, I see a whole tsunami of computing on cards. This fuelled by the 3G/4G networks coming from Japan/Korea. Either handsets could be powerful and/or the network is powerful in its capabilities. the combinations make a significant decider upon consumer pricing of handset hardware as well as network hardware/software resources.
You may have weak ( low on memory and cpu) resourced handsets but the carrier can still deliver great content by providing efficient and cost-effective data application service. This can be compared to the cost of having a resourceful feature rich handset mentioned in the article.
To sum it up, I am contantly reminded of the famous tag line of Sun Micro - The network is the computer. HOW TRUE!!!! The last ten years is sweet testimony to this. Broadband changed the face of bandwidth in computing so much so that people actually relocated from crowded expensive cities in the Bay area to Portland and ither interior locations ( report by Business 2.0 mag). Wifi (802.xx) is fast changing peer-to-peer networks. I am sure a time will come in sync with the Sun and Java philosophy wherein they will all be just services - downloadable or built on native of the hardware platform. In some ways, we are transitioning in similar times of yester year experiences of dumb unix terminals, $500 cheap PC of 1998-99. Come to think of it in todays terms, the $500 can get you a real good PC !!!!
Posted by KrishnaSo welcome to the new age of anxiety , info overload and consumerism