My Internet Notebook

a journal on software, mobile, marketing

TypePad Mobile

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The popular blogging software can be used on your mobile phone now: http://everything.typepad.com/blog/2006/08/introducing_typ.html

The mobile blogging tool is available on PalmOS, Windows Mobile and Symbian series 60 devices. Some nice screenshots are available here http://www.sixapart.com/i/screenshots_palm.jpg

Written by Y.

August 15th, 2006 at 6:10 pm

Posted in Internet,Mobility

Motorola and Shanda’s Mobile Gaming Linkup

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Via PRNewswire: Shanda Interactive Entertainment Ltd. (SNDA), a leading interactive entertainment media company, and Motorola, Inc. (MOT), a global leader in wireless communications, today announced an agreement designed to improve the way games are experienced and enjoyed on mobile devices in China. According to the agreement, Motorola will launch exclusive mobile versions of Shanda’s popular World of Legend and Magical Land online role playing games on specially customized Motorola E680g handsets.

If the deal is exclusive, it seems to me a better win for Motorola than for Shanda. Given the popularity of Shanda’s World of legend online game and Chinese youth’s habits of changing cellphones every 6 months, Motorola could get a sales boost to their E680g mobile phone. In the world of fasting moving innovation today, good mobile handset can only last so long, but addictive content (a.k.a. games) will last for a long time. On the other hand, Shanda probably also badly needs a power player in the mobile world to boost its image in the mobile gaming world. Plus, a mobile phone is a great platform for casual games, which is the direction of Shanda’s current strategy.

Written by Y.

July 28th, 2006 at 7:23 pm

Posted in Mobility

YouTube Success Story

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Kevin J. Delaney at kevin.delaney@wsj.com from the Wall Street Journal had a piece on how YouTube was able to become more popular than Google Video, MSN Video etc:

“It stood out from the growing corps of online video services, including an offering from Google, for its simplicity. YouTube serves up videos from its Web site directly or from other sites where people insert them, generally not requiring users to download any special software. To accomplish this technical feat, YouTube drew on open-source software and wrote its own code. The service can handle about 110 video formats and 64 audio formats used by digital photo and video cameras and cellphones.”

Now both Yahoo and Google has improve their service and matched YouTube’s uploading interface. But the popularity of YouTube as a web destination has already being established. Even big Hollywood companies are starting to use YouTube to distribute short films and TV clips.

Written by Y.

June 26th, 2006 at 10:31 pm

Posted in Business

Mobile Data Services Survey

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Ran across a survey by M:Metrics on Wireless Data Service Usage:

Wireless Data Service Usage by M-metric

What’s interesting is that the combined multimedia consumption (music, video etc.) is only 4% of the cellphone subscribers. Not sure whether it is because users have shown no interests or just because the wireless data networks do not provide the appropriate bandwidth for multi-media content yet.

Still, industry insider such as Allen Beasley is still very (maybe a little overly) optimitic. His company, Redpoint Ventures, has invested in cellphone-TV programmer MobiTV, mobile-payment service Obopay and AirPlay, whose technology lets cellphone users play along with TV sporting events and game shows. With broadband wireless networks and handsets in place, “the explosion of the Internet is going to happen in the mobile space,” he says.

Written by Y.

June 20th, 2006 at 11:57 pm

Posted in Business,Mobility

Big Shoes v.s. Bigger Shoes

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Apparently the world’s richest man Bill Gates decided to leave the day-to-day operations at the company he founded 30 years ago, leaving some big shoes for Ray Ozzie and Mundie to fill. I think, what’s more important is that he decided to fill himself in some even bigger shoes, i.e. to become a full-time phlianthropist. I truely admire his courage to step up to the plate to address the world’s endless problems.

The high tech industry produced no small number of high power phlianthropist from individuals such as pioneer William Hewlett and David Packard (HP), Gordon Moore (Intel), Steven Kirsch (Infoseek), Dave Duffield (Peoplesoft), Jeff Skoll (eBay) to organizations such as Community Foundation Silicon Valley. But Bill Gates’ decision to devote his full attention (i.e. his smart and money) to his fundation is sure to generate some very positive outcome for the entire sector.

I just hope that more high-tech leaders will rise to the challenge and work together for a better (not just more profitable) future.

Written by Y.

June 19th, 2006 at 9:23 pm

Posted in Business