Archive for Mobile Industry

MobileMonday Opens the 71st Chapter in Calgary

The global MobileMonday group officially gave the blessing to establish the 71st Chapter of MobileMonday for Southern Alberta as of lastWednesday night.

To kick things off we opened a Ning website to handle all the details about the organization. You can get to the site via http://mobilemondaycalgary.ning.com/. The site provides a great way to network with other members of the mobile community and to find out more information about the upcoming events.

Second, our first event is JAN 12, 2009 at Kits at 6pm.
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We will be running the event in the basement and it makes for a great venue location.

And finally, I’m sure you are all excited that I will be making a presentation at the meeting. I haven’t finalized a topic yet but I’m waffling between doing an Android demonstration or presenting one of our new applications (probably Snocator). If you have any recommendations or suggestions let me know.

See you Jan 12.

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KnowledgeWhere Aquired By Useful Networks

The recent spat of changes has slowed my rate of updates on the site and here is why;

KnowledgeWhere Inc, was aquired by Useful Networks out of Denver.Here is the news release:Useful Networks Acquires KnowledgeWhere

The sale was the culmination of many months worth of work and I think it will be a great asset to the LB industry in general. KnowledgeWhere gains the expertise and financial resources of Useful Networks , and Useful Networks gains the Location Application Platform (LAP) , gaming assets and technology that we have been created over the past 4 years.

It will be an exciting transition to work with the new team and use it to build on both our successes. I have had a chance to see the direction Useful Networks is headed and I know it will be disruptive in the very near term.

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Calgary DemoCamp 08

I spent last Tuesday at my first Calgary DemoCamp where I gave a presentation of PhoneTag Elite on a Nokia N95.

In case you are not familiar with BarCamps/DemoCamps (From Wiki):

BarCamp is an international network of user generated conferences — open, participatory workshop-events, whose content is provided by participants — often focusing on early-stage web applications, and related open source technologies, social protocols, and open data formats.

I was really impressed not only with the organization of the meeting but also the openness and candor of the participants and demonstrators. It was a great opportunity to display the capabilities of our company and also network with some great companies in the Calgary (and Edmonton) areas. Christian Idicula of CriticalMass out of Calgary provided a great summary of the presenters.

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CTIA Wrapup

Well it turns out that PhoneTag Elite didn’t take any major awards at the LBS Challenge . Our continuing curse, of always being a finalist never a bride came through again this year.

I have been involved in the competition for 3 years now and I think that by far this years applications were the most promising. The applications were solid and polished. Each of them looked ready to go to market and all of them included business plans.

Of particular note was a company out of California that produce a product called SpotJots. I’m testing out the product on my Nokia N95 now and it seems like it works really well. Most importantly the application is very fast and very clean. The design work on the site is great and simple. I’ll post a full review of the site when I can.

Also another participant, Trapster , produced a user-generated speed trap application. The mobile device tracks its location and when a driver passes a speed-trap on the side of the road, they can trigger a message to the server. This uploads the speed trap to a central server and when any device approaches an existing trap it can send an alert out to the driver. Great idea. After meeting the founder, Pete Tenereillo, and going for a short drive I can attest that he probably created this app out of a personal need.

If you have some time follow-up with all the application that were displayed at the LBS Challenge. You can demo most of them by downloading the Where.com application to your phone. 2/3rds of the applications were run on this platform. I’m demoing the platform now and I’ll send a posting out soon.

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Fido and Rogers Unlimited? Browsing Plan

Rogers Detailed Plan

Fido and Rogers today released their “unlimited” data plan. Which I believe is one of the major hurdles preventing the release of the iPhone in Canada.

But in classic Rogers form here are the details of who can use the data;

 Important: This plan includes unlimited on-device mobile browsing only. Plan is available on select phones only (PDAs such as Blackberry or Windows Mobile devices, PC cards and non-Rogers certified devices are not eligible). Data usage incurred on ineligible devices, incurred while tethering (using device as wireless modem for laptop) or incurred using non-Rogers (3rd party) applications downloaded to your device will be subject to pay-per-use charges of 5 cents/KB.

So the unlimited data plan only applies to those  phones that are completely useless for surfing the web and you can’t install 3rd party apps (Google Maps) to use the plan. Also you have to sign a 3-year cancellation fees apply plan. This doesn’t apply to video calling (who uses this anyways?) or video on demand. Really this plan is a money grab.

Pay attention, Rogers, this is what happens when you let committees decide on actions. This is the worst excuse for a plan I can remember.

Why not try this. $15 unlimited browsing (Well roughly cap it at around ~1 gig). However, require the user to use a PDA, Blackberry or new Air Card. This will drive new massive new sales of devices and encourage people to use them.

In the meantime, avoid the “unlimited” data plan, buy a PDA with WiFi and poach off your neighbours.

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