Jeff Clavier on: HBS Tech Panel: Valley of Destiny or Valley of Doom ?

Jeff has a summary of the panel at the TechCrunch party last week. It highlights some things others have said and why I wrote up my earlier post about finding cool companies outside of Silicon Valley.

Link: Software Only: HBS Tech Panel: Valley of Destiny or Valley of Doom ?

Dave asked whether Silicon Valley deserves to be at the center of the technology world, as it has been for the past 30/40 years. After living here for 22 years, Dave left because he felt that the Valley had lost its technology focus to get into marketing or retail opportunities, and lost its focus on creating great technology and rewarding the engineers responsible for these innovations.

However the Valley is so expensive that it has priced itself out as many people can no longer afford living here. He ventures that company will only afford to have their headquarter here and will have engineering and operations in other parts of the country/world.

The panel then debated whether the point that whilst the Valley is the center of the technology world, it is not the center of intellectual life – Dan pointing out that there is no art institute of international renown.

Books to fill your head with smartphone info

When I was marketing Series 60 (now called s60), I had always wanted to write a general book on how to get the most out of an s60 smartphone. Well, two books were written (not by me), and I was fortunate to be given some copies for myself (thanks Brian, Michael, and Ari). Here’s my brief overview of the two books.

 

101smartphone_1The first book, ‘101 Cool Smartphone Techniques’, by Dean Andrews, came out earlier this year. It focuses on s60 phones, providing tips for all the phones that were available at the beginning of this year. It is simple in layout, has many screenshots, and seems like an exhaustive tour of all the features of s60 phones. There are some pointers to resources for more info and some troubleshooting tips, too. The material covers topics such as phone basics, tips on how to use the phone more efficiently, customization options, and accessories.

The quality of the tips is really good. The topics are well organized and the tips are easy to follow. I hope that readers are encouraged to explore their phones on their own after being inspired by so many tips. For example, one tip reveals how to select multiple items in a list – a simple, but very useful tip. The author also peppers advice throughout the book, suggesting ways to keep the phone running smoothly, such as managing the memory and security options.

Recommendation: This book is excellent for the beginner, or the person who wants to know what else is available on their phone. I must say, I didn’t discover anything new. But, then again, I’ve explored every nook and cranny in the phone, so I am not representative of the general user. But, if you know someone who has an s60 phone and needs a little guidance, they will certainly learn a lot from this book.

 

Hacks_2The second book is ‘Nokia Smartphone Hacks, Tips & Tools for Your Smallest Computer’, by Michael Juntao Yuan, and it came out this summer.  The author stretches the traditional meaning of smartphone to include Nokia’s Series 40 (s40?) phones, but that’s OK by me. The book is not so much a cookbook with recipe-style instructions like the ‘101 Techniques’ book, but focuses more on explaining in prose format many interesting things one can do with one of these Nokia ‘smartphones’.

There are 75 cross-indexed hacks, covering topics such as phone basics, connectivity options, data exchange, email and messaging, and web browsing.  While the hacks in general are not what I expected them to be, most of the hacks do focus on the technical aspects of using these phones. For example, there are a bunch of tips on configuring and sniffing things out with Bluetooth on different operating systems.

The hacks also, as the title suggests, dip into some more interesting fun for the technically proficient (that counts me out). For example, there is a hack that shows how to install a mobile gateway on your server that will make it easy to read Gmail with a mobile browser. Or, how about whole hacks on converting DVDs to play on the phone, or how to code cool features in WML.

Recommendation: This book goes deeper into the technology and coding for smartphones than ‘101 Techniques’ does and covers Nokia’s s60 and Series 40 phones. The book is clearly written for someone who wants to do more than just understand how to use the phone. Sounds like the O’Reilly crowd to me.

 

Summary: Here are two books that cover a wide range of knowledge and tricks about Nokia’s s60 and Series 40 phones. The ‘101 Techniques’ is more of a recipe book for those setting forth for the first time to explore the features on their s60 phone. Users more familiar to s60 might not get enough out of it to justify purchasing it (you likely can Google the more advanced info). The ‘Smartphone Hacks’ book also covers some basics, but is really focused on giving the coding cowboy some ideas and pointers on how to do some nifty things with their phones. Yee-ha!

For more detailed reviews of these books, go over to All About Symbian:
– 101 Cool Smartphone Techniques review by Rafe
– Nokia Smartphone Hacks review by Ewan

Help me find US mobile companies outside of Silicon Valley

I was recently in Silicon Valley and was once again reminded of the self-reflective nature of the place – they fund folks in the Valley to run services in the Valley for people in the Valley to flourish or crumble in the Valley – with little regard for those outside the Valley.

Oh, yes, there are a ton of great companies there doing great things for everyone. But, my particular interest is in cool companies outside of Silicon Valley. Indeed, I have seen some interesting mobile companies (or great services that should be mobilized) in Vancouver, Seattle, New York, Boston, and Chicago (I’m not counting the great ones who have or soon will succumb to the call of California).

I would love to hear about young non-California (let’s stick to the US for now) companies that are doing cool stuff with mobile, or who have cool services that need to be mobilized.

I am personally most interested in Boston-area companies, but would love to hear about all other areas too.

Care to help out?

UPDATE 24nov05: I’m getting wink-wink, nudge-nudge from folks who know me (and my restless nature at the moment), but this really is a genuine question that is important for all those companies outside of Silicon Valley who have to work harder to get respect in the tech and mobile field. This question arose after finding that all roads I found were leading to Silicon Valley. I am just curious to know of other roads.

The Boston focus is, yes, partly a personal thing. But Boston was really big in the telecom networks and big iron days of the 70s and 80s and I expected mobile to also be big there, what with MIT, Worcester Polytech, the big VC firms, and the big analyst firms. Boston is the Hub for Biomedicine (been there, done that). Could it be the Hub for mobile communications, too?

MobHappy on: The Mobile is the PC of the Developing World

Chris lodged into my head the thought introducing the Internet to the developing world via the mobile phone. I’ve been preaching simple SMS- and browser-based services for the mass market, but then Chris pointed out emerging markets, where the next billion phone users are coming from*.

After that, when I was in San Francisco, talking to some great companies about mobile, I realized that everyone was thinking about how to extend their services via mobile to their existing customers. Heck, what about extending their services to new customers that they would never have since they will never own a computer.

Thanks, Chris, for sticking that thought so deep into my head that I can’t get it out.

Link: MobHappy: The Mobile is the PC of the Developing World.

As we sit with our broadband connected computers, surfing the web, rattling off email and IMs, Skyping Intercontinentally and publishing our ideas and opinions all over the world with blogging software, it’s easy to forget that much of the world just isn’t like that. Broadband connections (or even dear old dial up connections) are a rarity in much of the developing world, including (but not limited) to the massive populations of China, India and Africa.

*An interesting tid-bit: Nokia’s billionth phone was sold in Nigeria. The phone was the lowest-end phone Nokia had, the Nokia 1100. Telling, isn’t it?

What is Scribbletopia®?

Scribbletopia is a scribbling game my father played with me (I think his father taught him) and I in turn play my children. I have heard of others playing the same game, so it’s not something particular to our family.

In Scribbletopia, one player makes a scribble (we try to make it a contiguous line, just to make the game more challenging). The other player then tries to make a drawing out of it. Then it’s the other player’s turn.

I’ve been playing it since I was a wee bairn. Now, my kids are into it.

The new twist to the story is that we never had a name for the game. We just knew what it was on when one challenged the other with a scribble. But, my clever little daughter, on the verge of being all of 8 years old, came up with the name ‘Scribbletopia’ (topia, from Dinotopia), and told me for the first time today.

The name was so right, that it now official. The Googleverse does show one vanished (Tripod) instance of the name, so it is fair to say that my daughter is simply amazing (and so is her brother, of course, but that’s a story for a different day).

Does anyone have another name for this game? I’ve found descriptions to it. Here it’s called Squiggle. And other links show people using it in group settings.

PS The ® in the title is a joke – I have not registered the name. D’oh.