Muse of the Moment

Chinese Wife Sends Message after being Dropped

Mobile Matrimonial Wars continue

According to Chinese news service Xinhua, a Chinese woman in Weifang city in the eastern province of Shandong, set fire to 400 spanking new mobile phones in response to her husband leaving her.

37 year old "Mrs. Wang" seemed inclined to send a message to her hubby over the lack of bliss in their Burngingmobile_2 marriage. The Wang couple ran a successful phone retail business in Weifang. Weifang known as the Kite Capital of the World," is "flying high" due to its growth.

The surge in the Wang phone business  had put the marriage on the rocks, and the couple frequently fought according to the Qilu Evening News.  On March 3rd, after a "bitter row", the husband "slammed the door and left their home."

Wrought with despair, and crazed--or focused--with anger Mrs. Wang collected their entire stock of mobile phones, tossed them on the bed, set them afire and left. Acrid black smoke brought the fire brigade who quickly subdued the flames, but not before the handsets, valued at 300,000 Yuan (US$ 42,100) were consumed. 

Mrs. Wang has been apprehended and charged with arson.

Predictive Text Commission

Saturday mornings are usually when I'm trying to bang out my weekly post while my 11 year old fumbles Predictivetestcommission_2 around making himself a breakfast of Chips Ahoy, Oreos or some such sweet-stuff until his prison warden Pop shows up. 

Today's tasks included adding John Puterbaugh's blog Mobile 2.0 and Emerging Mobile Media Services to my blog roll. John, the Chief Strategist at Nellymoser, and I met at an InMobile Puterbaugh_2 event at the Mobile World Congress two short weeks ago. (John's on the left)We had an engaging conversation and he'll be a pod cast guest here in the near future. Since I was adding  Mobile 2.0 to the log rolling blog roll, I figured I should edit the list, and started to read through other blogs I had paid neglectful attention to. Mobhappy made me happy.

Words we should use vs. Words we do use

Russell Buckley and Carlo Longino's Mobhappy post"Where do the T9 people get their words?" was very insightful and included this dry British take off of two Oxford-like dons on the demands and dilemmas of predictive text functionaly. I wonder what the Chinese Pinyan equivalent might be like with Zi? Check this out from YouTube.

Mobile Humour for the Holidays

A) A home office consultant asks a network repairman visiting his house to address a connection issue:

Jack "If I have no wireless, does that make me a WiNo?" 

B) Several men are in the locker room of a private club after exercising. Suddenly a cell phone on one of the benches rings. A man picks it up and the following conversation ensues:

"Hello?"  "Honey, It's me." "Sugar!"  "Are you at the club?" "Yes."

"Great! I'm at the mall 2 blocks from where you are. I saw a beautiful mink coat. It is absolutely gorgeous! Can I buy it?"

"What's the price?" "Only $1,500." "Well, okay, go ahead and get it, if you like it that much."

"Ahhh, and I also stopped by the Mercedes dealership and saw the new models. I saw one I really liked. I spoke with the salesman and he gave me a really good price ... and since we need to exchange the BMW that we bought last year..." "What price did he quote you?" "Only $60,000!" "Okay, but for that price I want it with all the options." "Great! Before we hang up, something else..."

"What?" "It might seem like a lot, but I was reconciling your bank account and...well, I stopped by to see the real estate agent this morning and I saw the house we had looked at last year. It's on sale! Remember? The one with a pool, English garden, acre of park area, beachfront property..."

"How much are they asking?" "Only $450,000... a magnificent price, and I see that we have that much in the bank to cover..." "Well, then go ahead and buy it, but just bid $420,000, OK?" "Okay, sweetie. Thanks! I'll see you later!! I love you!!!" "Bye."

The man hangs up, closes the phone's flap and asks aloud, "Does anyone know to whom this phone belongs?"

Happy Holidays from Mobile Point View.

Open Channel D, please

Defining Mobile Hardware Moments

As a child growing up in mid-western suburban America in the teeth of the cold war, my worldly experience was considerably widened through the constant efforts to internationalize me by my war refugee French mother and former infantry platoon leader, retired State Department officer, practicing lawyer American father. Layer on the pop culture of the late 60s and the first of frequent international travel, I can look back and say my true steps to becoming a global mobile citizen were established through tv connections with Alexander Waverly, a New York tailor store front, and the agents of U.N.C.L.E. With the U.N.C.L.E. gun as part of my agent kit, as an eight year old I ran with my street mates holding a #2 pencil with a pin embedded in the eraser saying: "Open channel D, please. Overseas relay." My first use of high-tech mobile and global communicators. That pen phone was super cool on the "Man From U.N.C.L.E."

Check this Out

Well, the "Waverly phone" has finally arrived. Alexander Waverly was the boss ("Section 1, number 1") of Napoleon Solo and Illya Kuryakin who both used the "pen communicator." In the spirit of "Mr. Waverly" I dubb this the "Waverly phone."  Channel_d_6

My phone handset industry sources advise me that the "Waverly phone" prototype is in the skunk works of an undisclosed handset manufacturer out of Asia which is researching market interest in the device. Believing most users will connect the phone to Bluetooth earpieces, the two target-shaped areas on the top and bottom in the lower image are the earpiece and receiver.

This is not the first effort to create a "pen phone" by a mobile handset manufacturer. Haier has already launched a "pen phone" , the P7, albeit lacking the "pen" the descriptor applied only to size not functionality. No way does it have the stylish design edge of the "Waverly phone."

This piece of field intelligence on a actual "pen phone" caught my eye becasue of the resonance to my imaginative childhood, but also to a serendipitous meeting I had on a Singapore airlines flight two years ago. My seat mate on the flight was a delightful, and strikingly attactive woman. [A rarity since most international travelers are middle aged men.] After some conversation we discovered that we were both in the mobile phone business--Lunita Mendoza--the editor of Wireless World Asia magazine out of Singapore. During the course of flight conversation she showed me her "new toy", a pen phone. Incredible. I recall mentioning that the screen was large enough for sending and reading text messaging. Now the Waverly Phone has arrived.      

Background 4 U Gen Xrs & Gen Yrs

The original "pen phone" is a silver pen that converts into a communication device, and is one of the most memorable spy gadgets of any TV espionage show. The "Pen Communicator", as it is called, wasUncle_4  used regularly by the stars of both the Man From U.N.C.L.E and Girl From U.N.C.L.E. tv series. U.N.C.L.E. agents would remove the pen's end piece, flip it around and reconnect it, exposing a gold microphone grid. They would then extract a hidden antenna from the other end, which, when turned, would activate the unit. Pencmmctr The phrase “Open Channel D” would put Section II agents Napoleon Solo and Illya Kuryakin into direct contact with U.N.C.L.E. headquarters in New York City. Alternate voice-activated channels would connect them with each other, or with other field agents. Additional functions include amnesia inducer and electronic scanner. Fun Fact: James Bond's roots run through the show's creation.

Here's the TV theme which was my ringtone for my last phone, a Samsung slider:

Waverly Phone Design Drawbacks-Outside of the absence of the "&", "*", and "#" keys on the pen, I'm sure the ink supply can't last that long, nor the battery life as well. Some might argue the acoustics couldn't be that strong, but with the advent of NXT's thin screen speaker tecchnolgoy for mobiles, the microphone / speaker would be sufficient for secret agent calling. Is the Waverly phone easy to use? Well, details are naturally under wraps, so there is much speculation as to the full functionality of the Waverly phone. Simple to use, absolutely. Minimalist yes. So much so that a simple feature is not included in the prototype: a clip. Absent the clip, it won't stand up in a suit pocket let alone roll off a table once you put it down. (What was the the penalty for loosing U.N.C.L.E., hardware?) 

It fits comfortably in the hand resting between your thumb and forefingers. The W phone display is the unit's design showpiece taking full advantage of its real estate. While the beta version is black & white matrix, it is thought that launch versions will include brilliant colors, sharp graphics and halogram projection functionality. Unclear whether the device will be loaded with Android, Symbian or other Moble OSS. Look for it in speciality stores for Christmas '08 or earlier via Alibaba.com

Channel D...Out.                     

Tip of the hat to the US Central Intelligence Agency, the estate of Alexander Waverly , Archieves of the United Network Command for Law and Enforcement, the Nathan Hale Trust, the oral history of April Dancer and gizmodo.

What do you think about the Waverly "pen" phone?  Is this for real? I'm in the two way conversations business, especially with regular readers. It helps fuel my muse and provides a better product to get comments.  Please share your perspectives, additions, subtractions, bravos, taunts and tomatoes via comments. Anyone out there? Thanks for your continuing interest.

Kite Runner Movie Soars

My Vegas Pre-Screening

Last Wednesday evening I had the privilege in Las Vegas to attend a pre-release screening of “The Kite Runner,” movie adaptation of the immensely popular, best selling book authored by Khaled Hosseini. In Kiterunner_2 attendance at the screening for "influential" bloggers (how I got on this list is a mystery) was lead actor Khalid Abdalla who plays the central character Amir, the film's producer William Horberg, and movie critic Michael Medved for a fascinating post midnight screening discussion.

Setting

The deeply emotional story centers around Amir and Hassan, and these boys’ joy in each other’s company--especially through kite fighting--as they are challenged and face growing-up amidst unrest. One is bright, strong, and brave, the other questioning, uncertain and wantingly fearful, whose flight in the face of challenge unleashes a upheaving change in lives along Afghanistan’s tumultuous path and the wrath of the Taliban.

The Tension

The film has a transformational power shifting the audience back to a vibrant, energetic community of mid 1970s Kabul and the vastly different, yet integrated life of two 11 year old boys, Amir and Hassan. Akin to the prince and the pauper tale, one is privleged, the other a thread in the fabric of an influential household’s extended community which includes servant families. The textual layers and twists of the book are preserved in this wonderful and touching story deftly portrayed to the screen by Director Marc Foster.

We all know of the political changes in Afghanistan over that period, but the story rightly stays true to the book, with the changes of Afghanistan serving as a an active backdrop. The story has archetype themes including the strength of family love, perseverance in times of upheaval, a haunting failure, drive for paternal praise, and finally, daring redemption. It is an an emotionally gripping movie which is appropriate for adalescents through adults. Although two thirds of the film uses english subtitles while the actors speak the Dari of Afghanistan, the actors performace transported me. The task of listening to Dari and reading english was seamlessly delivered and dramatically heightened the movie experience for me.

Afghanistan’s harsh and stark vista’s are doubled by Xinjiang provence in western China, where the film was shot, and the scenerie conveys all that we’ve seen on the nightly news over the last twenty years. Thankfully director Fisher stays focused on the power of the story, and lets it unfold without an polemical agenda. The two boys' stations and actions frame their challenges, tragedy and redemption.

Bound for Oscar Nominations

The two local Afghani boys found for the movie are exceptional considering they have never acted before. Given the quality of the film making, a cast comprised of unknown actors drawn from Iran, Afghanistan, and the UK, and the great story--for what it is worth--I predict this film will win oscar nominations.            Go see this movie.   Rating: Five Stars

[Interested in learning more about the movie and the backstory click here]

Right Brain Symphony -Review of "A Whole New Mind"

I discovered Daniel Pink’s “A Whole New Mind” while I was searching for a better way to make power point presentations. Conceptualizing about Power Point sent me to the Zen of design, which sent me to the negative space of Pink graphics, which sent me to the psychology of multi media learning, where I landed upon Pink’s great book. The journey was reflective of Pink’s belief that just over the horizon, Right Brain (“R Directed thinking” in his lexicon), resplendent in its ability to recognize patterns in disparate actions, will be the key to success and competitive advantage.

After reading his book, you’ll agree that the future belongs to those of us who can craft symphonies from unrelated categories (as opposed to those who just analyze alone), who have narrative aptitude for story (instead of who just read power point slides), and who have empathy to solidify relationships (as opposed to transactional engagements), we will be the masters of the his Conceptual Age universe. 

Pink layers on aspects of globalization in advancing his argument pointing out that with ever flatter competitive markets, cost reductions and scale-well-educated workforces in Asia, the old narrow advantage of rote fact based work will fall to the greater functionality of working "jazz," blending and connecting "High Concepts"--relational advantages driven by right brain thinking. Not withstanding some of the New Age qualities such as “laughter class”, and buttressing the argument with globalization theory, Pink is spot on regarding the increasing economic value of pattern recognition and strategy development. At root his book is as much about approaches to business and competition as it is about psychology and the development of man’s working culture.

My epiphany in discovering the book is precisely how he outlined his theory of “High Concept” and its advantages. The pattern I detected in my journey was all about personal effectiveness. In riffing from design theory to graphics, then to learning theory, my “R Directed thinking” was cobbling together pattern recognition of personal effectiveness, the ability to lead an audience and establish “thought leadership.” That's how I jumped from powerpoints to human interpretation of information.

The easily read and well crafted book grabbed my attention from the first page. Along the way I found new language to describe how I already do things and approach problems. In building out a global business key elements of my success have been on the L Directed ability to execute, a focus on making things happen, but also within an overall big picture, R Directed aspects on the “Symphony” which Pink asserts the “Conceptual Age” will require. Too often, the business press narrows on “focus” to develop “expertise” but the real high value functions is not about how well you know one market or a technology, but how well you assimilate the pieces into the bigger picture. The special talent in the ability to interpret things simultaneously, in seeing all the elements of a situation and understanding what their integration leads to is really the Holy Grail in global business. In short, the whole is greater than the sum of its parts.

If you’re reading this blog, with its combinatorial elements, I think you’ll really enjoy Pink’s book. Whether it might be varied country markets such as Asia, N. America, Europe, Africa, Middle East, CEER, or a wide range of commercial sectors crossing mobile, banking, content, entertainment, platforms or social networks, the results and the rewards will go to those who can operate with equal aplomb in very different categories. Ummm, sounds familiar to my own background. [Note to Executive Recruiters, check out "About" on the side bar.] Probably why I enjoyed it so much. "A Whole New Mind” is an enlightening read for any global professional and should be on your reading list or office book shelf.

Your email address:


Powered by FeedBlitz