David Harper, of WINKsite, certainly gets it

MoMo Mike was
most kind to connect me to fellow New Yorker David Harper. Mike and I had spoken a lot about
mobile and the state of mobile in Silicon Valley (took about 2 seconds) and he
tipped off David one day to give me a ping.

I am glad he did.

David Harper is the brains behind Wireless Ink’s WINKsite, a nifty tool for creating mobile-friendly
websites. You sign up, point and click to choose what kind of content you want
on your mobile site, and that’s it. It’s really easy and quite versatile. For
example, you can put your blog, RRS feeds, and links on your site. The blogs
will be intelligently transcoded for
easy reading on the phone browser. You can also put other stuff on your site, such as
surveys, notes, guest book, forums, or chat. The WINKsite control panel makes it really
easy and fast to set up and you don’t need to code anything.

Click here to open up my mobile site.

David has deep experience in content management systems,
having successfully run an online marketing company, among other interesting things. He thought up WINKsite one day, dreaming up a solution to make it easy for folks to create
mobile websites.

He’s been working at it a bit over 3 years with pal, Jason Sabella, WINKsite itself
going live about 2 years ago. In the last year, people really became aware of
it. With no marketing or promotion, he’s now at over 9000 sites with something
like 110 million mobile screen views over the year.

Also, he’s picked up an impressive list of users – go check
out
the list of top sites that are mobilized by WINKsite. Some really smart folks, like Howard
Rheingold
,
O’Reilly’s MAKE crowd,
Debi Jones,
Boing Boing, and Om Malik have
WINKsites. And Scott Rafer left his CEO position at
Feedster to be the Chairman of Wireless Ink.

Enough of the name dropping.

What I like about David is that on one level, he has created
a tool that makes it dead simple to create a mobile website. On another level,
the navigation and quality of the mobile site is really good. And on another
level, he really understands how to bring together the PC-based broadband
experience with the mobile experience.

For example, on the phone, you can add content to your site
and do some light administration. From the PC, you can obviously do a lot more,
but in both cases, changes show up right away – it’s all one site. Also, what
is really neat, is that you can view the site either from the phone or from the PC.
Click on some of the relevant links above to see what that looks like.

I haven’t seen any sort of tool like this. I will admit that
I have been playing with WINKsite for some time and have sort of been keeping
David to myself (scheming on my part, of course). But, I really can’t contain my enthusiasm any more, especially
with some new stuff David is adding.

What’s that?

David’s methodically adding new things to WINKsite that make
the PC-mobile-Web link even stronger. For example, with a few
clicks you can add a chat room to your site (how kewl is that?). But, David’s
worked up a way to display where the chats originate from, based
on the location info in the user’s profile. That makes these
mobile website chats a bit more physical.

Another little thing he’s worked up is an intuitive display (see below) of what are the most popular chat tags. This makes it easier for
someone on a PC browser to scan and choose a mobile website chat, which they
can later participate in from their phone.


Basically, the mapping and the tags
make a strong link from the PC browsing experience to a mobile browsing
experience. I really don’t know of any website that makes it easy for folks to
go between PC browsing to mobile browsing, nor any site that takes advantage of the PC browser to promote so well the
discovery of mobile sites.

I’ve been challenging David to figure out a way to do the
reverse as well, since I am keen on building that round trip between mobile and
PC. He’s been working on a text-only way of generating the tag list, but the
browsers are pretty pesky. And I know he’s been thinking of the right things and will be adding some more cool things soon.

In summary, David has this easy-to-set-up personal content
aggregator (DLA, Marc?) for mobiles, with a harmonious and integrated PC and mobile
experience, and with connections that facilitate the flow between the PC and
mobile.

I see WINKsite growing steadily and on the right path to become a great mobile interface to the Web, adding closer integration between the PC and mobile and increasing the bi-directional flow of the total experience. I, for one, am sticking close and watching David.

You should, too.

2 Comments

  1. More on WINKsite

    David tells me that the new features I mention in my previous article are going live this week. But, he says there are some other cool things coming really soon (next week!):- A mobile version of the Conversations Tag Cloud-

  2. Winksite Conversations

    Charlie Schick posted about some of the stuff going on at Winksite. Ive posted about tying together the mobile and desktop versions, and I think the embeddable widget is a great move. There are some quirks still, like all the chatrooms in Calif…

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