Jippo in the car

Jippo in the car
Originally uploaded by schickr.
Mon 08.05.2006 08.46 Image (181)
Digicel Offers Cell Phone Service in Haiti
This is what things will be like as we bring on the next billion, from the emerging markets, over the next 18 months.
Fercryingoutloud, they were lining up eagerly. We’re not talking about any developing country, but one of the poorest and still trying to recover from years of gruesome civil strife. And these folks have almost no money.
What does that say of the power of personal mobile communication?
Knock ’em out, Digicel.
Link: Chron.com | Digicel Offers Cell Phone Service in Haiti.
Haitians eager to try the service started lining up at dawn [emphasis mine – CS] outside the company’s stores, some pushing to get inside.
The launch followed a splashy marketing campaign in which Digicel promised cheaper calling rates, a reliable network and free phones to anyone who canceled service with Haiti’s top mobile provider, Comcel.
"For too long the people of Haiti have had to put up with a terrible service, bad networks, high prices and total unreliability if you pick up the phone to make a call," said billionaire Irish entrepreneur Denis O’Brien, Digicel’s chairman and founder. "From today, we see a new beginning in Haiti."
BTW, I heard this story on the radio and had to link to it.
More on Digicel in this Red Herring article.
WINKsite: fusing the mobile and Web worlds through barcodes
You all know my fascination with WINKsite, a really versatile service for building mobile Web sites that fits into the mobile lifestyle. It’s simple, easy to adapt to any region, makes it easy for folks to connect (and there’s more it can do there, still), is fueled by the users, and works on a wide range of devices (from PCs to basic phones to advanced phones). And, what is really important to me, it caters to something that previously could not be done – it lets regular folks easily build their own mobile world and interact with other similar mobile people.
I’ve been using an N93 for a few months now and I was a bit disappointed that my WINKsite (http://winksite.com/cschick/mobile) wasn’t working in my new souped-up phone browser. This wasn’t unexpected, since new phones usually send out different headers and such, causing mobile sites to cough at the unknown browser. But, in this case, I knew I could do something about it and started troubleshooting with Dave Harper, the big kahoona at WINKsite.
Well, suffice it to say, with tips from Nokia browser guru, Franklin Davis, we were able to get it all back in line. But, an off-hand comment from Dave regarding barcodes really got us rolling.
Barcodes, anyone?
As you may remember, WINKsite has been doing some interesting stuff with barcodes. Well, it so happens that the N93 comes with a barcode reader.
Of course, Dave and I needed to test it out.
He sent me two 2D codes (QR and Datamatrix, left and right below), and not just any codes, but the very codes that would open up my WINKsite.


Bada bing bada boom, it worked so well:
– flip open the phone and start the barcode scanning app
– select ‘scan code’
– then up comes a really cool view finder that uses the main high-res camera
– bang, it took a blink of an eye to catch the code (it actually zooms in if it is too small)
– then it shows me the link, all selected and ready to click
– click and boom, the browser opens up
That’s so cool so cool so cool.
Here are some screen shots. These are in the wrong view. You actually use the app in landscape (phone in main camera imaging mode), but my screen grabber only works in portrait (keypad dependency, long story).
And here’s what’s cooler: You know that taking a pic of a regular CRT monitor gets those black raster bars (point any digital camera at a TV and you’ll know what I mean)? Well, the barcode reader changes the refresh of the camera to minimize the lines (they become light gray) to better catch the code. Takes a bit longer, but it works. The QR code was picked up no problem. I had to do the Datamatrix code twice before it caught.
So kewl!
Ok, so you gotta be a geek to like that trick. But, it means that codes can be read from practically any source – TV, computer, poster, biz card, t-shirt, and maybe tattoo.
Now you’re seeing what I’m seeing. Now you can start to see what Dave is up to.
The real story
Why are barcodes important to the mobile world? First of all, barcodes are everywhere. They are used for making things easily machine readable. Second, cameraphones are proliferating at a prodigious pace. The quality of the cameras is good enough to read barcodes. Put those two together and you get, the third, more relevant, point, barcodes provide a link between the physical and digital world. Scott Shaffer has a bazillion examples, such as this one. Go browse his site for more.
So what does it mean for the WINKsite user, like, uh, me?
It’s a great way for me to promote my mobile site from the physical world, to provide access in a way that doesn’t require me to forward a link or have someone type it out. Dave has a great review of how QR codes are used in Japan. As he says, ‘QR Codes have become the door to the mobile Internet for the average mobile user’.
WINKsite is providing tools that make it easy for WINKsite publishers to create a barcode and display it, either on their website or on printed materials. Like Dave says, it completes the cycle from digital to real and back – ‘create mobile space, distribute code, people see code, scan and visit’.
WINKsite already has a widget for TypePad the displays the WINKsite chat rooms and such. A widget for TypePad with the barcodes will be huge! (exclamation point from Dave) Right now I have a link on the upper right of my site that opens up my WINKsite in a small window for a PC-based browser. But, I want to get my link into someone’s phone, not PC. If I had a code folks could just point to and scan (and now I do, but put in manually), that would be so much easier.
It’s all about the fusion of the mobile with the Web and this is a great example. Dave calls it ‘Converging "Realspace" and "Mobilespace"‘.
WINKsite is now a universally accessible mobile site that’s connected to the physical world through barcodes. To me, the hardest part was how to build the mobile site that gets visited once someone scanned in a URL via a barcode. WINKsite now solves that, leading to a long list of ideas of what can be done (listening Monty?):
Taken from Dave’s list of suggestions:
* linking print articles to RSS feeds and blogs
* delivering product or tourist information
* linking "lost pet" flyers to contact forms
* dating – use your imagination on that one
* "find me" maps
* promoting an event or concert on flyers/postcards
* connecting geocachers to mobile logbooks
* creating museum exhibits and street tours
* building scavenger hunts or "collect-them-all" games
* downloading ringtones, music, wallpapers or video (think indie artists)
* ticket sales for clubs
* directing people to your mobile site or storefront
* enabling mobile sales from catalogs or flyers
* distributing coupons
* conference badges connected to profiles
* business cards connected to company sites
* signing up to text alert services
* running competitions
* connecting mix tapes to podcasts or vidcasts
* connecting posters to podcasts or vidcasts
* enabling community interaction at public locations
The next steps
So, Dave is taking care of the problem of how to create the barcodes and what they point to (the mobile sites). The next hurdle will be to get folks to be able to read them. QR codes are popular in Japan because the readers are already integrated with the phone. I had tried before to load the apps from Semacode and others, trying to turn my phone into a barcode reader. But I had little luck. Now that Nokia is basically rolling in a universal (or at least versatile) barcode reader into their phones (I don’t know which others), the clever use of barcodes should increase.
Users and providers still need information how to use the code, such as what size can be used, some demos, info and demo links, and usability issues. I am sure Dave would be more than willing (as would I) to help folks, such as print publishers like Burda Media, Time Inc., or McGraw-Hill (to name a few), make that physical to digital connection via mobile phones for their customers. Mabe that’s fodder for futher posts here.
Parting thoughts
Dave is all excited. He’s experimenting to see what happens when you mix easy to create mobile sites, with easy to create barcodes, with easy to use mobile phones with barcode readers.
‘What will happen now,’ Dave asks, and I think he nails it, ‘when we let winksiters create micro content embedded in barcodes that they can distribute via secret codes?’
Secret codes. Indeed.
That should be interesting.
Rudy’s Women in Mobile 09 – Amy Jo Kim
Rudy has a great series of interviews of Women in Mobile. The latest is of Amy Jo Kim, a renowned game designer. Go read it.
Link: m-trends.org: Women in Mobile 09 – Amy Jo Kim.
Amy Jo Kim is an internationally-known designer of social games and gaming environments, now specializing in mobile. Her clients include Digital Chocolate, Electronic Arts, eBay, Limelife, and Yahoo!. Her expertise in community architecture and social systems design was showcased in her book, Community Building on the Web, a design handbook for networked communities.
Tomi Ahonen on: What happens when majority access web via mobile phone
Tomi has a good take on some recent data from Ipsos Research. Very much in line with what I have been saying here (eh, a few points rub me the wrong way, but they balance out my prejudices). He does a good job of not only putting so much in one place, but of bringing up issues and answers (in the text and comments) related to the impending dominance of Internet access via mobile phones.
Go and read it.
Link: Communities Dominate Brands: What happens when majority access web via mobile phone.
Spotted a telling statistic by Ipsos Research, who reported that at the end of 2005 a total of 28% of all mobile phone users access the internet with their phones. Across the 2.1 billion mobile phone users, that works out to 588 million users. And obviously across the 1 billion internet users at the end of 2005, that means that almost 59% of internet users access the web via cellphone.
Great article, Tomi.
Tom Hume ponders: SMS and IM
Tom makes a brief comment on the nuances of IM and SMS. There are a few good comments, so go read them.
But, if I may extend what Enrique (CEO) mentioned: SMS and IM are similar and different. Much like the other ways we can communicate with a mobile, such as voice, email, MMS, even a posting client, SMS and IM are part of a continuum. Yet, one thing that the mobile desperately needs that that IM has is presence.
I don’t IM since it’s really a PC-based activity and I am not usually at my PC. But, I wish my contacts on my phone had presence information*, information to tell me about the availability and communication preferences of the person I am interested in contacting. Therefore I could choose the best form of communication before I connect. And this presence has to be tied somehow to my profile as well, so that it’s easy for me to change my presence status throughout the day.
We’ve had IM and presence servers for a very long time. I remember pointing out the benefits of presence-savvy phones many years ago. I think the reason IM and presence is not more a part of the mobile network fabric is part multiple proprietary IM systems, multiple players (multiple service providers and phone manufacturers), and maybe a touch of benign ignorance or imagination.
Link: Tom Hume: SMS and IM.
Weirdly, I was chatting to a guy from a VC earlier today about exactly this. I’d never thought of it before, but I suspect usage of SMS and IM are rather different – one seems significantly more synchronous than the other. Can one replace the other – and will users want them to? I can’t exactly see them running side-by-side…?
*Nokia has a few phones with presence-savvy contacts, but I don’t know of anyone who uses it or if anyone in the ‘wild’ actually knows how to set it up.
The Economist on: The magnificent seven to end African poverty
I just read an article (quote below) on the UN’s Millennium Project. It’s a no-nonsense take on the simple things that can help people in developing nations get out of poverty. Basically, it’s some of the things that we take for granted that allow us to get beyond just trying to survive – Maslow, step 1 as it were.
One thing that I want to point out is that one of the seven magical items is the mobile phone.
Yes, the link between mobiles, getting out of poverty, and emerging markets will be one part of my book.
Link (subscription may be required): African poverty | The magnificent seven | Economist.com.
The Millennium Project is trying to show how a few simple reforms, seven in all, can substantially improve lives and provide livelihoods. These are: fertiliser and seed to improve food yield; anti-malarial bed nets; improved water sources; diversification from staple into cash crops; a school feeding programme; deworming for all; and the introduction of new technologies, such as energy-saving stoves and mobile phones.
Shiny ball

Shiny ball
Originally uploaded by schickr.
Mon 01.05.2006 18.59 Image035




