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Mobile Technology Websites Update

March 19th, 2008 . by xtopher.longley

Google has seen an acceleration of  Internet activity among mobile phone users in recent months since the company has introduced faster Web services on selected phone models, fuelling confidence the mobile Internet era is at hand, the company said on Tuesday.

Early evidence showing sharp increases in Internet usage on phones, not just computers, has emerged from services Google has begun offering in recent months on Blackberry e-mail phones, Nokia devices for multimedia picture and video creators and business professionals and the Apple iPhone, the world’s top Web search company said. 

“We have very much hit a watershed moment in terms of mobile Internet usage,” Matt Waddell, a product manager for Google Mobile, said in an interview. “We are seeing that mobile Internet use is in fact accelerating.

The growing availability of flat-rate data plans from phone carriers instead of per-minute charges that previously discouraged Internet use, along with improved Web browsers on mobile phones as well as better-designed services from companies like Google are fuelling the growth, Waddell argued.

Google made the pronouncement as it introduced a new software download for mobile phones running Microsoft’s Windows Mobile software that conveniently positions a Google Web search window on the home screen of such phones.

Similar versions of the search software which Google introduced for Blackberry users in December and certain Nokia phones in February have sped up the time users take to perform Web searches by 40 percent and, in turn, driven usage.

The software shortcuts the time it takes for people to perform Web searches on Google by eliminating initial search steps of finding a Web browser on the phone, opening the browser, waiting for network access, and getting to Google.com. By making a Google search box more convenient, mobile phone users have begun using the Internet more, the company said.

“We are actually seeing a 20 percent increase in the number of searches by people,” Waddell said.

Google’s mobile plug-in software lets users customize their phones to feature Google mobile services instead of relying solely on software features network carriers have pre-installed on the devices.

“Faster is better than slow, especially on a mobile device, where fast is much better than slow,” Waddell said. “Not only are we are seeing increased user satisfaction but also greater usage.”

Microsoft expects to have sold 20 million Windows Mobile devices by the end of its fiscal year in June, which together with Blackberry and Symbian-based phones represent upward of 85 percent of the Internet-ready smartphones sold in the world.

Users of phones based on software from Research in Motion, Nokia’s Symbian-based phones and now Microsoft Windows Mobile can download the software at http://mobile.google.com/.

Google officials said in August that they had seen a similar surge in usage of Google.com via mobile devices following the launch of the Apple iPhone last year. The iPhone offers a full-featured Internet browser unlike many phones.

Waddell said Google had seen iPhone users perform as many as 50 times more Web searches on these computer-phone devices as users of standard mobile feature phones typically do.

Mobile Websites - Fad or Future?

December 26th, 2007 . by xtopher.longley

Not many people in business with whom I speak are aware of the .mobi domain released last year. Most web designers or marketers are now familiar with the purpose and design issues related to creating a mobile website for a prospective customer.

However, is the jury still out on these type of websites? Is is the future or fad - another internet standard over-hyped?

The design implications of creating a mobile website is built around XHTML Mobile Profile 1.0. The whole basis for this subset of HTML, is due to the restrictive nature of mobile devices currently available. These restrictions include:

  • Processing power of device
  • Memory Limitations
  • Screen Size and Resolution
  • Data Bandwidth Limitations

Data Bandwidth restrictions really affect the operability of mobile websites. GPRS offers around 3 to 4 Kilobytes per second therefore downloading anything takes an age. Websites needs to be optimised for minimal page size in order to make it usable. Downloading music such as mp3`s needs 3G speeds (384kbs) or connection to a WIFI Access Point to really have any kind of fast transfer rate.

Apart from technical limitations, there are also the practical limitations of using small mobile devices. Size is everything in mobile devices. Devices are getting smaller and this is the fashion. It`s cool to have something small but supposedly useful. However, the design trend is to be heading toward larger screens, touch screen navigation and the minimum numeric keys to make life easier. One drawback here is that these systems require more software control from the OS - usually Windows Mobile or Symbian, and these are prone to bugs which causes lock ups and crashes.

Considering most users online probably use their personal computer 85% of the time for browsing, purchasing and downloading, using a mobile device is quite restrictive and time consuming. To make things more equal, the mobile website design has to be lightweight, whilst incorperating the appropriate content, images and operability for the user. The standard marketing practices of keyword research, links and content building are still as relative as ever.

If mobile devices/phones eventually become a large touchscreen sensitive mini computers with faster processers, efficient non windows based Operating Systems and acceptable standard data transfer rates, it would not be too much of a problem to handle full size web pages in Micro Browsers which have recently been developed for such practices. (Even though it might require some downsizing of the original page or multi sections, somewhat like the iPhone has incorperated.)

In my own experience of using Ebay, I encountered more “Page could not display” errors than actual search results. Whether this is the limitation of the device or website itself, I`m not sure which. However, it rendered the whole thing unusable. Logging in also requires a text input mode on the device, then returning to the web page to submit the login information. All rather time consuming, especially using the numeric keypad rather than standard qwerty layout.

One area which seems practical to use mobile website design is where the Network operator provides its own content and services, rather than users search the Internet itself. Network providers can implement a whole range of useful services which are integrated into the device and easily accessible via the device menus. Circumnavigating the need for a user having to search for things such as maps, restaurants, cinema information elsewhere etc. One drawback for this is network providers tend to use this as a marketing method for upselling more products, like pictures or ringtunes rather than useful functions.

Whether the average business owner will profit from the additional mobile website content in  terms of selling or advertising remains open to question. At this stage, I think it is more realistic that the larger organisations like Ebay, Yahoo, with their huge development teams, will incoperate mobile website design to its full purpose.

Where do .mobi domains stand? Filling the gap for older devices not able to process full sized pages probably. Until we reach the day where the majority mobile devices can handle the full content of the Internet, moble website design will be required to service the average users technology.

 

I am a computer nerd!

December 10th, 2007 . by xtopher.longley

Okay, I had to do this test. Being surrounded by computers and all things network related, all mathmatical based, I needed to know my nerdi-ness. Just a bit of fun really.

Nerd Tests
I am nerdier than 80% of all people. Are you a nerd? Click here to find out!

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