applications

Writing in today’s New York Times, Jenna Wortham reports that:

The ultimate risk for the carriers is becoming “dumb pipes,” providing only the data connection and not selling any more sophisticated communications services themselves.

It’s not just a risk.  It’s reality.  Carriers are moving toward becoming dumb pipes, and there’s little that can be done about it, as consumers are demanding a volume of applications that carriers themselves can’t deliver.  Moreover, the carriers have ceded the tollbooth role to entities like Apple, who have a better understanding of both developers needs and consumer behaviour. 

It didn’t need to be this way. Long before Apple introduced its game changing App Store, voices in the next generation telecom community were asking for better developer support, developer programs, and common standards for building and selling mobile applications.  As Andy Abramson writes:

…just about every mobile operator gets offered the opportunity to have the new services first. Nary a business development professional doesn’t have access to their counterparts at all their major mobile telcos via their LinkedIn directory or from first person relationships so the fear of the rising tide of upstarts isn’t paranoia. It’s reality. Apple, Google, Microsoft, the Yahoo and AOL of old all had it figured out, and only IP communications is the future and they built their businesses that way.

Andy suggests that carriers get back into the services and applications game – sell the pipe at a loss, and charge for the applications.  But is it still true that mobile operators get offered the opportunity to have new services first?  Or is that a relic of yesterday, also?  I think it’s the latter.

Carrier product groups need to focus on the core data services that people buy today – internet, voice, television, security – and figure out how to be the best at delivering those bread and butter products to the customer.  In business it’s managed PBX, conferencing and collaboration, and call center.  Carriers need to deliver these core services better than the Valley, and at a better price than the Valley, in order to remain relevant.

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Monday’s Globe had a feature piece on the best mobile applications for entrepreneurs.  The thesis?  Smartphones are good for more than just gaming.  Amen to that!

They listed a few of my favorites, but also missed some invaluable productivity aids like Dropbox, Tripit, FlightTrack, LinkedIn, Analytics HD, and of course Calliflower for iPhone, all of which I depend on day to day to run my business.

What are the top mobile applications you use for business?

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EComm: Time to change the station

October 29, 2009

I’ve spent a little over a day at eComm meeting people, listening to the conversations and presentations happening and reflecting on what I’ve heard. During the panel yesterday afternoon, I noted that I spend less on voice, data, and text messaging each month than I ever have, but more money on communications over all. What [...]

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BlackBerry Doomed?

October 29, 2009

Toktumi’s Peter Sisson asks Is the BlackBerry Doomed? and goes on to compare his recent experience of developing for BlackBerry with his experience as an iPhone developer.  Many of his complaints – non-standard hardware and OS versions in particular – are the same issues we ran into two years ago when we developed and delivered [...]

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Two Bold moves by RIM.

March 5, 2009

RIM stirred the pot yesterday when they unveiled the BlackBerry App World (the new renamed Blackberry application store), and details of their pricing plans leaked out.  The two most important details: RIM has set the pricing tiers for App World, and in the process eliminated $.99 and $1.99 as price points for applications.  Blackberry applications [...]

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Not one, but TWO BlackBerry stores

October 6, 2008

Everybody’s jumping on the application store bandwagon.  Today, via CrunchGear, come screen shots of the BlackBerry Application Center.  Apparently set to debut with the BlackBerry Storm and OS 4.7, this store differs from Apple and Google’s offerings in that “All application data will be stored at the carriers’ locale; RIM is totally out of the [...]

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Grand Central as Mashup Platform?

January 11, 2008

Devin Holloway wonders if Google plans to include automatic speech recognition in the Grand Central service.  He then speculates that perhaps they're simply not interested in enabling third parties to build applications that integrate with Grand Central.  That would be a pity if it were true.  Grand Central would be a killer mashup platform. Craig?

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Gird your loins, men. It's WAR!

December 12, 2007

The die is cast, the gauntlet thrown… pick your melodramatic metaphor kiddies, but one thing is clear from this afternoon's announcements by Facebook and Bebo — it's war on OpenSocial.  Mark Z and his team have correctly judged that OpenSocial is a threat to their burgeoning platform, and have decided that the Facebook API, architectures, [...]

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Rogers: Divorced from reality in the Walled Garden

December 5, 2006

I just got a pamphlet in the mail the other day from Rogers, offering all kinds of new services to buy on my Blackberry.  Included: Rogers NewsClip.  This handy application helps you save time by delivering the latest news, headlines, stock quotes and more from the Internet to your wireless device.  Just $3/month.  I’m not sure [...]

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VON: Where the Apps Are

September 11, 2006

“…after a long stint as a low-cost PSTN replacement technology, VoIP is finally beginning to evolve and become part of the web fabric. This is critical – because in the future, voice will just become a feature, to be embedded in different apps”, writes Om Malik in his VON Preview.   Om is predicting announcements from Jajah, [...]

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