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Nimbuzz wants you to demand more from your Mobile

Posted by Tattletech on Sep 1, 2010 in Mobile, Mobile VoIP, mobile social networking
Image representing Nimbuzz as depicted in Crun...
Image via CrunchBase

Recently, Nimbuzz decided to run a blog series called “Demand more from your mobile”.  And you know what? We actually didn’t realize how much you could do with your mobile phone with Nimbuzz. Sure, yea we knew you could chat and call  – but then it struck us – that is just the tip of the iceberg. The fact is that today your mobile device is THE thing you use to connect to your network. We used to walk around with our ears to our mobiles, now we walk around with our precious thumbs or fingers glued to our mobiles. To us, this is why we believe that universal communications – now and in the future – will be via your mobile and via companies like Nimbuzz. In their kingdom, you have all of your “contacts” in one place and by “contacts” I mean those people you talk to, chat with across all the communications channels we use today – social communities, online communities, your mobile’s address book – yup that’s right – everything all together. I want everything all together. I want it all in one place, I want to be able to communicate with whoever I want, when I want, across any platform where my posse resides.  Can your operator do that? I don’t think so.  — JH

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Let’s play the long game

Posted by Tattletech on Jul 24, 2010 in Mobile, Mobile VoIP, Next generation communication

Alrighty, we waited a bit for the dust to die down on this one, but we just wanted to go on record to say that we don’t approve of public spats between companies – it’s pretty classless and does your consumers no good – what is the point of behaving like a guest on Sally Jesse Raphael? It just looks bad.

So what’s the 411 on the Fring spat with Skype? To us it doesn’t matter cause everyone has overlooked the bigger issue here – the long game of mobile VoIP or as consumers/users call it – mobile voice or wait.. free long distance, depending on which generation you ask.

I asked my mother-in-law and she says she is positive that “someone” has overlooked that it’s free so we should use it as much as we can before “they” shut it down. Interesting.

But, let’s take it back a step and look at what the frack we are actually talking about, if indeed we do know what we are talking about …. what is Mobile VoIP anyway? According to Nimbuzz, it all started when folks could make calls over the Internet (VoIP). And then well you know that old Internet caught on and you could get it on your mobile and then you could make calls over the Internet from your mobile phones (mobile VoIP), instead of via your mobile operator’s network.

So, we just asked Nimbuzz what they thought (and they told us, well to be fair, they told a bunch of bloggers):

Mobile VOIP is just a piece of the puzzle, which makes up the future of mobile communications. The future of mobile communications is a unified communications platform that gives users the freedom to have free and mobile calls, IM and all your friends as well as social networks in one place. And that means from any provider, anywhere in the world. This puts the user in charge of how they connect and communicate.

And, according to Nimbuzz, you can still talk with your friends and family over Skype via Nimbuzz. Their relationship with Skype remains the same and they continue to let people talk over Skype or any other instant messaging or social network, which ever they choose. Yay!

They go onto say: (we feel like jumping up and down shouting Yes Yes!)

Mobile VoIP is the start of something much bigger in mobile communications – and openness and choice are key components of this. Nimbuzz sees mobile VoIP as an entry vehicle to create the next generation of mobile communications. Delivering a unified communications solution to the mass market through the convergence of all the ways that users communicate today – chat/IM, social and online communities, mobile voice and SMS/text – for free.

We currently see companies battling for market share around features, but the future of mobile VOIP is not about SDKs, unlimited data plans, video or other individual features. It’s about building Value Added Services (VAS) around the user’s contacts or address book. Mobile VoIP is a true VAS. Nimbuzz believes in a global mobile community across all platforms, communities, devices and operators that gives users the ability to choose how they communicate. Calls will be free. Revenue will be generated from enriched mobile communications for all industry players, including users and operators. Simply put, it will become as ubiquitous as talking face-to-face at the same cost, free.

I think that is something my mother-in-law could get behind. – JLH

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The Mobile Internet

Posted by inkgirls on May 7, 2008 in Innovation, Mobile, Mobile industry stats, What makes good news
1. NEC Cellstar 500 series (1992)  2. Nokia 2110 series (1994)  3. Nokia 5120 (1998)  4. Kyocera 2135 (2002)  5. Audiovox CDM8300 (2002)  6. Samsung SCH-A650 (2004)Image via Wikipedia

Here’s a statistic that surprises us – only 15% of mobile users in Spain use the internet on their phones. We were surprised because we were under the impression that everyone was mad for the mobile and anything that it allows us to do. But then we realized that actually, its all the hype that is out there around the “next big” application that maybe made us think that all of us were clammering for everything on our mobiles. Naturally, we know that if it was easy to browse and find information on the internet that maybe that number would be bigger – its not rocket science and yet we seem to be skipping past what is obvious – the internet is there, content is there, its everywhere – all we need is for someone to package it up in a container that fits who we are and then send it us – or let us send those containers to our friends.

This is what Kimia is doing – with their technology and their yet to be released service which creates small pieces of mobilized web content that can be passed and shared with others – customized to what the user wants. We have been using it since Monday and really like it – we find that it does make finding content that we like easy and the fact that we can share it, makes it really simple – and we like this approach – they are just taking what already exists and adapting it – moving it forward and allowing a more robust use of the internet on the mobile.

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