« January 2008 | Main | March 2008 »

February 2008

MWC Podcast: GSMA's Innovation Outpost

Last year the GSM Association launched the GSMA Mobile Innovation Marketplace to assist fledgling Mwcinnovate companies developing innovative mobile services and products in their quest to "crack the carrier barrier" and bring their value to mobile consumers.

The purpose of this arm of the GSMA is to identify, foster and highlight innovative companies within the mobile communications ecosystem. While in Barcelona I had the chance to learn more about what I'm calling their "Innovation Outpost" (which Andy seemed to like) in an interview with Andrew McGuire, GSMA VP for Mobile Innovation, who runs the program.


Listen to my podcast with Andy McGuire of the GSMA (10 mins)

Looking to raise the profile and bring attention to the initiatives of innovative companies, the GSMA has crafted a GSMA "endorsement" process to take mobile technology, application or service ideas from concept to launch through a unique, high profile audience of Operators, Investors and Media. It's a greatMwcmim_3  idea providing a tool which enables the mobile operator community to be more of a center of influence within the mobile industry ecosystem. Something that has been lacking in the past, although some operators have corporate venture arms such as Orange FT's Innovacom or Swisscom which serve similar purposes.

Besides the Mobile Innovations Awards at the Mobile World Congress events in Macau and Barcelona, they are developing a "match-making marketplace" for innovators, investors, operators, stategic partners, and corporate interests to stimulate and facilitate research, introductions, discussions and, most importantly business development.

Mobile Innovation Market Place conference

Look out for some of the world's leading mobile innovations to be highlighted at the Mobile Innovation Marketplace conference in Atlanta, June 3 & 4, 2008.

China Cutting into Microsoft's Bid for Yahoo?

According to Zaobao.com, Beijing is looking to intervene into Microsoft's acquisition of Yahoo by asking Chinagears Chinese online e-commerce service provider Alibaba to provide detailed information on the acquisition and by keeping a close watch on the process of the acquisition as well as its possible influence on Alibaba and its impact on the Chinese internet market.

Red Hottest rumor coming out of China is that the Chinese government is intruding into Microsoft'sMicroyahoo  bid for Yahoo by requesting Alibaba, China's e-commerce giant, to proffer information on the potential acquisition's impact on Alibaba and to exert some influence on the possible acquisition. Yahoo is a significant shareholder of Alibaba, and the rumor is that the Chinese government has contacted Alibaba in the hope of knowing about the influence of Microsoft's acquisition of Yahoo on Alibaba.

Chinese government types are not keen on a having a foreign company potentially controlling or influencing the Great Firewall of China, hand on Alibaba the till of filtering content, so they are concerned about maintaining local management control of Alibaba.  But, the government may have to stay on the bench until the playing pitch is changed as a result of China's Anti-monopolization Law not taking effect until August 1, 2008. Until then the Chinese government is powerless if Microsoft is able to execute the purchase before then.

Another blame China brewing in the winds?

You, there. What do you think...is the Chinese government really that keen about the acquisition of Yahoo byComment_2 Microsoft? Are they that paranoid, do they really have a chance, or is this just the usual "stir the drink about China" to get some coverage? Comments are readily appreciated!

MWC: Slick Sightings in Barcelona part 2

Tagattitude

NFC using the phone’s audio channel to transmit secure data signing transactions. Mwctagattitidue

Translation: How to use the phone’s voice channel as an NFC (Near Filed Communication) device enabling mobile payments transactions. Really? What are you making a call to use the channel?  No.

Like GestureTek, Tagattitude shows combinatorial innovation where a set of seemingly unrelated component technologies can be combined for new innovative applications. It uses NSDT (Near Sound Data Transfer). Consequently any existing or future mobile phone can make a secure mobile payment transaction similar to those of specialized NFC services requiring embedded handset software, clients or other more complicated and costly NFC solutions. Time saver, money saver, means faster to market in the NFC world.

 

I like Tagattitude since it fills technology gaps and provides interoperability which are key factors in harvesting revenue from mobile technology. It provides a technical bridge until the complete, more robust deployment of NFC solutions hits the marketplace. It offers low cost contact-less services for non-NFC phones. It can be a backup for NFC services in case of temporary unavailability. It offers immediate contact-less payment solutions to begin educating the market. Great value proposition.

All these leapfrogs the need and necessity for hardware medication or software injections while awaiting for mobile phones with new technology. It uses a previously otherwise used audio channel as a cryptographic pipe to transmit secure transaction data. Very clever. This simple use of "current pipes" is ideal for established and emerging markets.

Imagine you're a street agent for a carrier in an emerging economy country and would like to Mwctagattgirl have a transfer from your phone account to a subscriber's. With Tagattitude, the agent's "point of sale terminal" can be his mobile phone, and he can readily accept and make transactions. This is significant to the operators as well since they can transform all their prepaid accounts to essentially pre-paid money accounts thus offering mobile payments to all their customers. An FI (Financial Institution) can also launch mobile payment solutions independently of all telecom operators.

Founded by three French smart card and telecoms execs, Yves Eonnet, Loic Eonnet and Herve Manceron, the company is based in France and funded by Innovacom, Orange France Telecom's venture arm.

MWC: Slick Sightings in Barcelona

Trade shows of the scale of the Mobile World Congress always have constant serendipitous moments when you are standing in the Mwclng_6canyon boulevards of four story exhibition booths frantically trying to orient yourself with thousands of people streaming by you. You forge on, look up and find yourself next to a booth and something about it catches your eye, or you run into someone you haven’t seen in a year, or even better you bump into someone you saw only two short weeks ago but 10,000 long miles away. Such are my run ins at the Mobile World Congress.

That’s how I came across GestureTek and Tagattitude.

Mobile Wii Device or Reflecting New Movement in Mobile Technology?

Gesture Tek provides computer “vision” and gesture-recognition technology for presentation, Mwcgesturetek information and entertainment systems. Telefonica O2 recently announced a strategic investment in GestureTek and they were being showcased at the massive Telefonica Movistar booth.

What GestureTek does is provide motion sensor capabilities to your mobile phone-- without any additional costly chip or handset client. That’s critical since it means there is no additional cost layer to the operator nor consumer to make your phone a spectacular tool, especially for gaming. Think turningMwcgesturetekb  your mobile handset into a Wii controller, and you’ve got the idea.

How they do this is even more remarkable. By engaging the camera on your phone a signal emanates from the lens and “senses” changes in the 3 dimensional topography the camera sees. Amazing. It must have some serious math processing going on somewhere in a box installed in the network.

GestureTek is a 20 year old company which has shaped ‘applied computer vision’ for computer-human interaction.  The company’s multi-patented video gesture control technology (VGC) lets users control multi-media content, access information, manipulate special effects, even immerse themselves in an interactive 3D virtual world – simply by moving their hands or body.  They deliver Wii-like gesture-control without the need to wear, hold or touch anything.

Seems the company has been way ahead of its time, and now the mobile camp has caught up with it and they’ll now become a permanent residence.  No one from GestureTek was at the Telefonica booth on Wednesday while I fought throught the crowds there, so I’ll have to learn more about them at CTIA.

Bet on them getting attention in Vegas for CTIA.

Continue reading my "Slick Sightings" at MWC part two here.

I Scooped the New York Times on iPhone Gap

Today, The New York Times "discovers" that 1.4 million missing iPhones are not registered in the ATT network and that most have found their way back to China in "After China Ships Out iPhones, Smugglers Make It a Return Trip."  Sound familiar? Iphonchina

Regular readers may recall my posting "iPhone Revenue Gap" of January Nytimesiphone 30th, 2008 ( three weeks ago ) where I broke down the resulting revenue gap of the "lost iPhones" for Apple, ATT, as well as projections against the UK market with O2.

Apple in the middle kingdom has been an interest of mine here going back to the launch of the iPhone when I posted about iPhone imitators in "Asian Rivals to iPhone" on July 30th, 2007; covering negotiations with China Mobile in "China Mobile Selling iPhones" on 11/27/07 regarding the sale of the iPhone, as well the Bullhorn apparent failure of negotiations between Apple and China Mobile at Mobile Messaging 2.0 where I am a featured columnist in my January 20, 2008 post  "Apple Rides the Dragon: Not!".

So, faithful readers, remember you read it here first!

MWC Podcast Interview: Mobile Monday's Jari Tammisto

Mwclng_5 Mobile Monday is a global community of mobile industry visionaries, developers, Mwcmomo_2 influentials and other interested parties fostering cooperation and cross-border business development through virtual and live networking events.  The interest to share ideas, best practices, mutual utility and talk trends in the the global mobile industry is the 'glue' that keeps the group together. Consider it Face to Face Social Networking around the mobile campfire one Monday a month all around the world.Momojari_2

Listen to my conversation with MoMo CEO Jari Tammisto here (8 min)

Physically meeting, making face to face connections, this is an off-line, 'open source' grass roots organization that has taken the mobile industry by storm.  Every first Monday of the month, mobilists gather at over 70 local MoMo outposts around the world. MoMo communities convene to encourage innovation in the mobile sector, facilitate networking between individuals drawn from small and large companies, as well as between local and foreign contributors. As a volunteer organization it promotes mobile innovation through the organization's monthly events, organizational awards and international conventions,-- there is a global convention in the works for May in KL, Malaysia.

As Jarri relayed to me off line after our conversation: "We plan to host over 700 Mobile Monday events in 2008 in 70 different cities around the world, and we expect to see more than 90,000 participants. This makes MoMo the world’s leading event organizer in the mobile technology industry.” Besides running the Mobile Monday Global Peer Awards here in Barcelona co-located at the GSMA World Congress, where Luis Jorge Romero, Standards and Innovation Director at Telefónica O2, and Pekka Ala-Pietilä, CEO and Co-Founder of Blyk were keynote speakers, he was also working forwarding a project with the GSMA, so look out for word on that soon.

Check out whether there is a Mobile Monday in your corner of the mobile world. If there isn't one, start your own!

MWC Podcast: Hawala Money & Mobile Remitances

Mwclng_4   

For the past five hundred years "mobile" money transfers in the Islamic world were accomplished through the Hawala or Hundi.

The Hawala is an informal money transfer system with a huge network of money brokers which are Mwchawala primarily located in the Middle East, Africa and Asia.  The transaction takes place entirely on the honor system. The unique feature of the system is that no promissory instruments are exchanged between the hawala brokers. No records are produced of an individual's transactions, no records of individual users are kept; only a running tally of the amount owed one broker by the other. Settlements of debts between hawala brokers can take a variety of forms, and need not be direct cash transactions.

If you think mobile remittances are a modern phenomenon, think again. Modern Mobile remittances are but one of several such systems. Another well known example is the Fei Chien, meaning flying money system indigenous to China, also used around the world. These systems are often referred to as 'underground banking', which isn't entirely accurate since they operate in the open with complete legitimacy (sometimes the ends are illegal), and often these services are heavily advertised within immigrant communities.

Jumping to Mobile transactions of the 21st Century

Mi-Pay Ltd. was established in 2003 by executives who stepped out of Logica, the SMSc and messaging innovator. Originally it had a focus on outsourced pre-paid top off services for mobile operators whichMwcmipay_2 enables consumers to safely and securely add to their acounts from their handsets. Mi-Pay has initiated a pre-paid recharge solution for mobile operators concentrating on Europe and the Middle East.  It is looking to help modernize the traditional Hawala/flying money system by providing the mobile payments processing solutions to network operators interested in money transfer services such as remittances. Mi-Pay has been sharpening their technology over the last three years and is now bringing the solution to market focusing on the emerging markets of the Islamic crescent of central Asia, the Middle East, Africa and Latin America. They currently provide the payments switch to the new market entrant in Dubai, du.

Learn more about Mi-Pay and listen to my interview with Mi-Pay CTO, Simon Cavell at the Mobile World Congress. (8 min) 

MWC: Snap. Crash. Lost. Epilogue-Vandalized

Voyage Return: Vandalized

Recall in my earlier post this week, I illuminated some of the friction points which had emerged during my coverage of the Mobile Web Congress in Barcelona. Mwceve

I thought I had put all my problems behind me when at 04:15 am on Friday when I was departing, serendipity played it’s hand while I walked out of my apartment to run into a Japanese fellow getting into a cab with an MWC knapsack. He invited me to share it to the airport, then proceeded to pay it all since he was a journalist covering the event. Great start to the day and time to bury the past week. Alas, by the day was over the Yang had overpowered the brief Ying. When I picked up my garment bag at IAD (Washington DC-Dulles) a locked compartment had been torn open and clothes, files, and my CardScan device had been pinched.

When I was in high school in Rocky River, Ohio, I was a middle distance runner on the track team competing in the mile and half mile run. I'm thankful for all those painful days running and developing a mindset of compartementalizing pain and anguish. I drew deeply on those experiences the last few days--physically given the venue is every bit a mile plus long, and elevates about 300 feet from the entrance to the palace above the exhibition areas (8 of them), and having sharp elbows in a crowd is a distinct advantage--and emotionally to just bury the barriers in my mind, and go off to execute on the day's activities. Now at 4:20 am (jet lag folks) from the perspecitve of my corner office aery, the trip was much better than last year and was quite productive.

I'll write more over the next few days.

MWC: SMS "Hardening"

Secure SMS ?

As I've been wandering through the MWC halls of the Fira at Plaza D'Espanya I've been lucky to discover some interesting companies and propositions in the mobile industry. There are also media events with some select companies available for in-depth review. Here's one which caught my eye at Showstoppers ( www.showstoppers.com )  regarding text messaging security : CellTrust.  Celltrusta

CellTrust provides security for SMS. Wait, you think SMS is actually "secure"? Mate, when it comes to security it is all about degrees. For you and me sending short texts to each other, that might be secure enough. Who knows you might even be lucky enough to pull a bird by sending tonight's pub meet to the wrong number.  But what about enterprises that send out alerts and notifications to its work force, customers or critical caretakers? Consumer grade security isn't "reliable" for CIOs and company IT leads or for the ever more demanding management of mobile banking and transactions. That's where CellTrust positions its proposition..

CellTrust is providing control, accountability, compliance and security to SMS in the enterprise environment. Using pubic key encryption they guarantee recipient end to end privacy and two factor authentication without the expense and complexity of a proprietary, Mwccelltrustl bespoke solution. By providing the SMS gateway to the enterprise and MNOs, their encryption technology layers over the routing rules enabling CellTrust to create a secure SMS environment. It wasn't anything I had ever thought of in a consumer messaging company, which is why it caught my eye. Through the combination of their platform technology and a micro client with password protection they secure and provide an SMS hardened solution. Although they could have modified the MAP layer of the SMS as we did  at the former Mobile 365 to provide tracking capabilities through our networks. That's something they should consider as an added layer of functionality in their security "suite."

A "hardened" SMS comes with guaranteed secure delivery through their "Advanced Encryption Standard, a read and delivery confirmation to the sender, option for password protection prior to decryption and display of a message, even a remote wipe API, for when that handset is lost or stolen Mr. Phelps.  You can learn more about Celltrust at www.celltrust.comCelltrustb

I would think the natural market for this would be banking applications, as well as government authentication--although i think much of that may have already been explored and gobbled up by RIM's Blackberry. Who knows, but definitely watch CellTrust.

After all, it's 11:00 pm, do you know if your SMS is secure?

Mobile World Congress: Snap. Crash. Lost

I´ve been lucky given all the big conferences I´ve attended over the last 12 years from CTIA, CES, 3GSM and now MWC, with things going pretty smoothly but I think the ying of my conference universe has shifted to the yang. I remember three years ago in Cannes a Danish colleague of mine at the time stopped to have beer before we left town for the airport. Placed his jacket on a barstool. When he got Mwclng to the airport in Nice, he noticed his passport had been pinched from his jacket. His green card was in it, and he ended up having to return to Stolkholm to have the green card re-issued from the country of us citizenship. It took him three weeks to get the card re-issued and able to return to the states.

Snap. One Fried Computer Battery

Late last week while in London, my computer battery died-it no longer is willing to hold a charge. So, the only way I can use my computer is if I have it plugged into a wall electrical outlet. Pretty inconvenient if you want to take notes or blog while in a presentation at the biggest mobile convention known to man. Argh.

Smartphone OS crashes

My smartphone, essentially a small computer with a phone, which runs an operating system just like a desktop, crashed on Sunday. I turned it off to board my flight from London, then couldn´t turn it back on. Did a hard reset, took out the battery, etc. FInally removed the SIM and the data on the phone poped up, but no connectivity with the mobile network. Spent half my day on Monday, missing the mobile payments seminar, looking for a local phone store with SIM unlocked phones. Reviewed the offerings, picked up an LG which I was planning on selling on ebay on my return to minimize my loss, and figured I would try one last time. Miraculously after 4 hours of searching for a network my phone was operational. Pain averted but a lot of time and emotional cycles lost. Avoid the Microsoft Windows for Mobile. At least the phone works for the moment.

LOST: My lifeline

I´m somewhat anal in trying to maximize my experience in these things, be punctual for meetings, get to where I´m going, etc. so I use a small three ring binder which had my briefs for meetings, my schedule and some personal inspirational quotes which keep one slogging through the challenges of life. The quotes have been with me for 16 years. Last night at an InMobile cocktail event, where I was drinking nothing stronger than original coke, I somehow lost the notebook. Major bummer since I have to recreate three days worth of meetings from memory, plus notes from 4 days of a consultancy I just started. Goes to show you that when you´re among thousands of people, moving from meeting to meeting, even the smallest and most important things can be misplaced. Kill me now.

Let´s see how I fare over the next three days. It certainly will crimp my blogging plans.

EPILOGUE

Wait there's more. Click here to learn of my return voyage.

Your email address:


Powered by FeedBlitz