Posts Tagged ‘iphone’

Juley* I’m back!

// August 27th, 2008 // 0 Comments // Me

#mobilefeast Showtime! Time to see if I can walk the walk...

*”Juley” means “hello” in Tibetan.

I was on a speaker panel at Mobile Feast today so I suppose I can’t pretend to be in the Himalayas any longer! Yes, I’m back, though it took me a week to complete triage on 1900+ unread emails and deal with a pile of bills and other snail mail.

I’m still in the process of uploading some 8Gb of photos I took while in the Himalayas, but there are already some good shots there if you have a moment to check them out. I’ve sprinkled a few at the end of this post if you don’t have time to go to Flickr.

This was the first Mobile Feast conference, and while any new conference can use a tweak, it was a promising start for a conference that aims to help businesspeople from outside the mobile industry understand what the future of the mobile internet might look like. I was speaking on a panel predicting what future mobile content might look like, and with me on the panel where Stephen Kilsby of game developer Viva La Mobile, Jennifer Zanich from mobile social networking startup Xumii, and Christina Thurn from Walt Disney’s internet arm.

While I didn’t have to present with any slides (yay) I had a few things to say along these lines:

  • Youth finds its own uses for things. Young film makers took cinema – originally a fine art medium – and invented Hollywood blockbusters. Young music producers took the music production industry built for recording jazz music and used it to make something 100x bigger – rock and roll. TV and computers were both built by an older generation, then ‘hacked’ by a younger generation who did things that were new, different and world-changing. The next big generations (Y and Z) will be consuming content and services primarily via a mobile, not a desktop or laptop. They won’t grow into a desktop as they age. They will make content and services on mobile devices that are as incomprehensible to us as Jimi Hendrix was was to the men who invented the LP, but which will find millions of customers and make millions of dollars for those of us smart enough to back the right young innovators. We should stop trying to define how this generation ‘should’ use the mobile web and focus instead on observing how they use it – that’s how we’ll discover how to make the mobile blockbusters of the future.
  • The iPhone Appstore is the beginning of the end of the mobile ‘carrier deck’. The appstore is the mobile equivalent of the ‘My Yahoo!’ and ‘My Excite’ personalisable homepages of the late ’90s desktop internet – a necessary middle stage between the walled garden of AOL and Compuserve and the open, unrestricted access of Google. On mobile devices, the carrier deck will be replaced by a user-generated deck – a mobile homepage created by the mobile user and their sphere of friends – the content, topics and products they love/hate right now. Find the right taste-makers and mavens in the mobile youth market now if you want to get big usage of your mobile content or applications – these people are nearly free at the moment but will become more expensive as they realise the commercial power they have.
  • The demise of the carrier deck will also allow content and application publishers to derive some ‘long tail’ revenue. Carrier decks kill long tail revenue by burying old content/apps too deep. To illustrate the potential of long tail revenue for mobile content I pulled out my iPhone and played ‘Duck Dodgers in the 24½th Century’ – a Daffy Duck cartoon made by Warner Bros. in 1952 – I’d just rented it on iTunes Store for my son to watch on my iPhone and Apple TV. 1952 and still renting? Talk about a long tail!
  • Carriers will soon be forced to share data revenues with content/app publishers like they do with handset manufacturers. Too much of the revenue in the mobile industry still rests with the ‘dumb pipe’ providers. Too much consumption of that data will be driven by the publishers. Critical mass will be reached sometime in the next five years, probably with a deal between social network or social messaging providers.
  • Apple’s total market cap recently overtook Google’s. I’ve been a user of Apple’s ‘soup to nuts’ delivery channel from content publisher tools to online content sales systems to home entertainment hardware for long enough to make this prediction with confidence: Apple will be the largest entertainment company in the world, measured by revenue, in the next five years. Feel free to remind me I said that!

Finally, what I didn’t get to say was that eight years ago this month I was busy delivering the first mobile content for an Olympic games – the Sydney Olympics 2000. So much amazing progress has happened in less than a decade!

See, in 2000 Yahoo! was angling to try and be the major online partner of the games. Though no mobile content rights were made available by the IOC, Mark Jackson and the good folks from the Sydney Olympic Organising Committee did their best to help us out. Problem: there were almost no web-enabled handsets in Australia at the time.

So we recruited and trained spokesmodels to ride visitors around Sydney in Yahoo!-branded rickshaws and offer to show them our WAP coverage and SMS alerts, driven by content licensed from local content publishers.

The content was served in an early WAP browser, was text only, woefully behind the live results available on TV, and was delivered incredibly slowly on Nokia 7110 handsets. If you were really in no hurry to get somewhere, our spokesmodels would help you login to your Yahoo! account on the handset (it took about 4-5mins per login) and set up some SMS alerts (which most users would soon turn off because not only were they out of date, SMS was punishingly expensive.) The spokesmodel could also take your photo at the Olympics in Sydney and upload it to Yahoo! Photos so you could share it with your friends… only, not until the spokesmodel returned to a desktop PC later in the day, since the handset didn’t have a camera and even a 100k image would have taken centuries to upload even if there was a way to get the image file onto the handset. My first cameraphone was a SonyEricsson T68i that had the camera as a separate plug-in device, released the following year.

From memory, I think we had 10 spokesmodels on rickshaws at any one time, each with a Nokia 7110 and we just about emptied Nokia’s stocks of 7110s – we had most of the 7110s in the country at that time. Let’s be generous and say maybe there were a hundred 7110 handsets in Australia at that time and assume all of them had been setup for WAP access (the 7110 didn’t usually come with WAP settings pre-installed) . So in August 2000, less than a decade ago, there were maybe a hundred mobile handsets in Australia capable of mobile browsing. Desperately slow browsing, in greyscale only, at very great expense and with almost no Australian-generated content or applications to browse.

Yes, we have a long way to go, but we have already come so far.


Amazon’s international billing problem

// February 28th, 2008 // 0 Comments // strategy

Met Mike Culver, web services evangelist for Amazon’s S3 cloud services today on his first trip downunder. All this cool stuff about how we can base an entire startup on a pay-as-you-go storage and computing model with the same reliability and speed as Amazon itself.

Mainly technical discussion, so a lot of it way over my head but one of my questions hit home: 

If Amazon’s charging me in USD and only accepts credit card payment, the foreign currency exchange fee my bank is going to charge me is a big hit. My bank’s 3.3% for Mastercard and 3.4% for Visa foreign currency transactions is probably standardish.

Mike hadn’t come across that before but seemed serious about taking that issue back to the US to get solved.

Not as big an issue for me personally as having no amazon.com.au, but prolly enough to make such a variable cost unaffordable here.

US companies still aren’t great at the whole international product strategy.

(btw, no links or image with this post because iPhone STILL doesn’t support copy & paste grrr)

[Sent from my iPhone, still unable to copy and paste and it's 2008]

Activating an iPhone in Australia, and first impressions

// August 6th, 2007 // 0 Comments // Other news

Can’t believe it’s taken me so long to commit this to the blog, but here’s my iPhone story…

Good friend Ben Keighran very kindly stood in line several times at Apple Stores across the Bay Area to finally snag me an 8Gb iPhone at the end of July. For the man in the midst of securing a Series A finance round from a big Valley VC firm, setting up offices in the US for the first time and recruiting an exec team, this was no small time penalty for him, and I thank you again, Ben!

Then Wyatt Zoi, a relative of a Bluepulse staffer, very kindly agreed to schlep the iPhone home to Sydney for me a week later. Wyatt and I had never met before, so we agreed that I’d meet him at the arrivals gate with a sign with an iPhone on it, so he could recognise me.

So there I was, at 8am on a Sunday morning, only one day back in Sydney myself after trekking in the Himalayas, and half-dead from the ‘flu. But I had a big colour laminated sign with an iPhone on it, and for every arriving traveller who assumed I was insane, there were two who looked at me and grinned, figuring out for themselves why I was there and what the sign was about.

Excuse me, would you be the man bringing my iPreciousss?
Waiting at the airport with my custom iPhone sign so Wyatt could recognise me.

Wyatt, Bearer of the iPrecioussss
Wyatt, bearer of the iPreciousss, grinning at my lunacy.

iPhone, out of the Apple bag
Transferring the iPreciousss from Wyatt to me. Fortunately, he was immune to its power, and I didn’t have to gnaw it from his cold, dead fingers like you’d have to do to take it off me at this point.

Got the iPrecious!
I have the iPreciousss! See how its magical powers are making the reflective panels on my backpack glow with a spectral silver light? (OK, that could be the flash I guess).

Schwing!
At home at last. The box is so small! How does Steve cram so much geeky goodness into such a tiny box?

Alec points to indicate how awesome the iPreciousss is
The unpack experience is a whole new level of geeky deliciousness. It looks so fantastic in the box it’s a shame to take it out. I felt like Arthur pulling the sword from the stone.

Sadly, I had heaps to do when I got home – friends coming around for a party, food to prepare, garden to prep, beer to chill – so I really didn’t get to play with the iPhone until 48 hours later, which nearly killed me.

iPreciousss! pre activation
It already had some charge when unpacked, but I had to leave it here for the rest of the day while I entertained friends. Curse them!

Getting the iPhone activated in Australia wasn’t too bad, once I found iActivator, a gui app that puts it all together and even gives you an interface so you don’t need to use command line. Step-by-step instructions and a download here.

However, I found I kept getting an error message on the final activation step. So if you try this at home kids, make sure you (1) use Activity Monitor to quit iTunes Helper as well as iTunes before you begin; and (2) make sure you launch iTunes again before doing the activation step in iActivator. Then it should work like a charm.


Update: thanks to Steve Fenech over at the Daily Telegraph for the heads-up on iNdependence, another new GUI activator app. Haven’t tried it yet, but worth a try.

iPhone? Nah, but awesome as the first PDA/Video iPod
It’s an extraordinary device. The presentation when I took it out of the box made me feel like I was stealing something from the cold, dead hands of an alien astronaut from the remains of his ship, or removing the sword from the stone that would make me King of all England!

So many things have been well thought through in the industrial design. I love the resolution and brightness of the screen most of all, and the way the necessary external buttons are tactile, but really low profile so they don’t distract from the beautiful shape at all. I love that there’s absolutely no gap or difference in height between the chrome metal casing and the glass, god knows what the failure rate must be at that point of assembly.

The touch interface and supplied apps obviously have some more evolution to do but hell, this is version 1.0 people! I can’t believe how polished it all is for version 1.0.

Don’t get me wrong, I’d love it if I can get this iPhone to work with my .au SIM card at some stage, but if I can’t, I’ll be happy to have this as my main iPod until the .au iPhone is released.

Since it’s not 3G and I can’t run my own Java apps on it, use a cut-down fast mobile-specific browser like Opera Mini or even install a custom ringtone, it’s not much of a phone, and so I’ve decided I don’t actually miss that functionality a whole lot. And the camera in my SE K800i phone craps all over the iPhone’s camera.

But as an iPod, I’m totally comfortable with what it cost to buy – it pwns the rest of the iPod family. I can’t believe Apple wouldn’t make this the interface for all future video iPods.

If I was Apple was rebrand and restructure iTunes. It’s way more “iSync” now than “iSync” is, and obviously “Tunes” doesn’t really reflect everything it now manages. The interface stiller flects playlist management, and that’s only part of it now.

I’d rebuild iTunes from scratch, since some of the core may still be third-party stuff they acquired to get iTunes built in a hurry. It’s still mentioned in the copyright notices for the product so I’m guessing it’s still in there.

Don’t get me wrong, I’d love it if I can get this iPhone to work with my .au SIM card at some stage, but if I can’t, I’ll be happy to have this as my main iPod until the .au iPhone is released.

Tell me, have you played with any third-party apps yet? Has anyone you know tried to reskin theirs? (like, why? but still, some people have!)

Activating an iPhone in Australia, and first impressions

// August 5th, 2007 // 0 Comments // Other news

Can’t believe it’s taken me so long to commit this to the blog, but here’s my iPhone story…

Good friend Ben Keighran very kindly stood in line several times at Apple Stores across the Bay Area to finally snag me an 8Gb iPhone at the end of July. For the man in the midst of securing a Series A finance round from a big Valley VC firm, setting up offices in the US for the first time and recruiting an exec team, this was no small time penalty for him, and I thank you again, Ben!

Then Wyatt Zoi, a relative of a Bluepulse staffer, very kindly agreed to schlep the iPhone home to Sydney for me a week later. Wyatt and I had never met before, so we agreed that I’d meet him at the arrivals gate with a sign with an iPhone on it, so he could recognise me.

So there I was, at 8am on a Sunday morning, only one day back in Sydney myself after trekking in the Himalayas, and half-dead from the ‘flu. But I had a big colour laminated sign with an iPhone on it, and for every arriving traveller who assumed I was insane, there were two who looked at me and grinned, figuring out for themselves why I was there and what the sign was about.

Excuse me, would you be the man bringing my iPreciousss?
Waiting at the airport with my custom iPhone sign so Wyatt could recognise me.

Wyatt, Bearer of the iPrecioussss
Wyatt, bearer of the iPreciousss, grinning at my lunacy.

iPhone, out of the Apple bag
Transferring the iPreciousss from Wyatt to me. Fortunately, he was immune to its power, and I didn’t have to gnaw it from his cold, dead fingers like you’d have to do to take it off me at this point.

Got the iPrecious!
I have the iPreciousss! See how its magical powers are making the reflective panels on my backpack glow with a spectral silver light? (OK, that could be the flash I guess).

Schwing!
At home at last. The box is so small! How does Steve cram so much geeky goodness into such a tiny box?

Alec points to indicate how awesome the iPreciousss is
The unpack experience is a whole new level of geeky deliciousness. It looks so fantastic in the box it’s a shame to take it out. I felt like Arthur pulling the sword from the stone.

Sadly, I had heaps to do when I got home – friends coming around for a party, food to prepare, garden to prep, beer to chill – so I really didn’t get to play with the iPhone until 48 hours later, which nearly killed me.

iPreciousss! pre activation
It already had some charge when unpacked, but I had to leave it here for the rest of the day while I entertained friends. Curse them!

Getting the iPhone activated in Australia wasn’t too bad, once I found iActivator, a gui app that puts it all together and even gives you an interface so you don’t need to use command line. Step-by-step instructions and a download here.

However, I found I kept getting an error message on the final activation step. So if you try this at home kids, make sure you (1) use Activity Monitor to quit iTunes Helper as well as iTunes before you begin; and (2) make sure you launch iTunes again before doing the activation step in iActivator. Then it should work like a charm.


Update: thanks to Steve Fenech over at the Daily Telegraph for the heads-up on iNdependence, another new GUI activator app. Haven’t tried it yet, but worth a try.

iPhone? Nah, but awesome as the first PDA/Video iPod
It’s an extraordinary device. The presentation when I took it out of the box made me feel like I was stealing something from the cold, dead hands of an alien astronaut from the remains of his ship, or removing the sword from the stone that would make me King of all England!

So many things have been well thought through in the industrial design. I love the resolution and brightness of the screen most of all, and the way the necessary external buttons are tactile, but really low profile so they don’t distract from the beautiful shape at all. I love that there’s absolutely no gap or difference in height between the chrome metal casing and the glass, god knows what the failure rate must be at that point of assembly.

The touch interface and supplied apps obviously have some more evolution to do but hell, this is version 1.0 people! I can’t believe how polished it all is for version 1.0.

Don’t get me wrong, I’d love it if I can get this iPhone to work with my .au SIM card at some stage, but if I can’t, I’ll be happy to have this as my main iPod until the .au iPhone is released.

Since it’s not 3G and I can’t run my own Java apps on it, use a cut-down fast mobile-specific browser like Opera Mini or even install a custom ringtone, it’s not much of a phone, and so I’ve decided I don’t actually miss that functionality a whole lot. And the camera in my SE K800i phone craps all over the iPhone’s camera.

But as an iPod, I’m totally comfortable with what it cost to buy – it pwns the rest of the iPod family. I can’t believe Apple wouldn’t make this the interface for all future video iPods.

If I was Apple was rebrand and restructure iTunes. It’s way more “iSync” now than “iSync” is, and obviously “Tunes” doesn’t really reflect everything it now manages. The interface stiller flects playlist management, and that’s only part of it now.

I’d rebuild iTunes from scratch, since some of the core may still be third-party stuff they acquired to get iTunes built in a hurry. It’s still mentioned in the copyright notices for the product so I’m guessing it’s still in there.

Don’t get me wrong, I’d love it if I can get this iPhone to work with my .au SIM card at some stage, but if I can’t, I’ll be happy to have this as my main iPod until the .au iPhone is released.

Tell me, have you played with any third-party apps yet? Has anyone you know tried to reskin theirs? (like, why? but still, some people have!)