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An Eye on Emerging Telephony
Do you think of "triple-play", "quadruple-play", VoIP or some other buzzword when thinking of convergence of voice and data? If so, you're missing out on the whole other world of "emerging telephony" where really innovative applications are being built on the network (and I say network referring to a network where voice is just another application). I've been following the Emerging Telephony Conference (Etel) which has just finished on the O'Reilly Radar and here are a couple of things which caught my eye:
- Jaiku, a company focused on "presence" launched at ETel. You can sign up and create a live profile but the real fun starts once you download their application onto your mobile (only Nokia series 60 supported currently). Jaiku can then share your presence with your contacts, provide you with their presence (if phone is on, off, meeting mode, etc.) and location (what cell tower are they near). I'm going to play with this in the office next week (maybe Riyaad or Safdar will impress me and have our test Nokia's loaded up with the app on Sunday morning). For more information check out Brady Forrest's interview with a founder.
- I've been meaning to install and play with Asterisk (an open source PABX) for ages. These guys got a lot further than me and created some neat applications. Considering that I've also been meaning to start taking Arabic lessons for just as long, the BanglaBollo service really stood out. It's a language learning platform designed to assist people learning Bengali - you listen to some words, then record how you would say them and they later get listened to (and graded by) a tutor. Now if only I had the time to create an a similar version for learning Arabic...
- The Flat Planet Phone Company
advanced phone services such as Hosted PBX, Mobile to VoIP connectivity, Disposable Numbers , Virtual IVR and many more....[your] own branded web site and all the tools to market the Flat Planet services under [your] own brand name.
The system includes a complete hosted softswitch, billing and customer management system. With the unique Flat Planet business model,no additional investment, equipment or manpower is needed.
- Grand Central that promises one (phone) number to rule them all. No more missing calls if you aren't home or out of the office or switch telco's. Or at least that's the idea...
- Cell Crypt which provides (you guessed it) encrypted calls between mobile phones through a client that you install. Let's just hope that your phone wasn't compromised before you installed the app!
Of course, you could always create your own phone mash-up...
@FOWA : Mobile Web Best Practices
Daniel Appelquist, a Senior Technology Strategist and Program Manager at Vodafone Group Research & Development is presenting on the "Future of Mobile Web Applications". He just put up a slide from the Mobile Web Best Practices Group on mobile best practices:
- Design for one web
- Rely on web standards
- Stay away from known hazards
- Be cautious of device limitations
- Optimise navigation
- Check graphics and colors
- Keep it small
- Use the network sparingly
- Help and guide user input
- Think of users on the go
Remember this post on .mobi?
.mobi
I've always felt that the .mobi TLD is a bad idea for a number of reasons:
- Websites should just work regardless of what browser is accessing them.
- Failing the above, if your website is not built to degrade gracefully there are more subtle and elegant ways to allow access to mobile device instead of making users visit a different domain (like swopping to a different style sheet or serving stripped down content)
- By working off a different domain, you are negatively affecting your SEO.
- .mobi becomesjust another domain that you have to acquire in order to avoid cyber-squatters (or worse still, phishers).
So you can imagine my delight at this question to the Mobile Industry at the 3GSM Congress:
Jon von Tetzchner Chief Executive Officer Opera Software, had an insightful question to the audience:
Should we have a .wii domain for the Nintendo Wii
The answer of course is no!
But it does illustruate the point very well that there can be only one Web
Phone Mashup Contest
While everyone in the mobile industry is off shmoozing at the 3GSM World Congress in Barcelona, how about spending some quality time disrupting the mobile industry?
Take part in the Phone Mashup Content
You love hacking code together. You love looking clever. Admit it. (Even if it's only for yourself). So do it, mashup something clever and show it off.
Strikeiron is holding a Telephony Mashup Contest. Basically, all you need to do is hack together some code that links telephony system to something that can provide interesting results. VoIP, PABX, SMS, whatever.
So go forth and disrupt thy telco...