Author Archive

Nimbuzz – mjelly Mobile 2.0 Service of the week

Friday, November 7th, 2008

James from mjelly here – what an exciting week it’s been with elections in the US, a massive interest rate cut in the UK and the mobile 2.0 conference going on in San Fransisco.  To end the week on a high we’ve got another Mobile 2.0 service for you here at Mobile Industry Review.  This week we are looking at one of the biggest mobile 2.0 plays out there – Nimbuzz!

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What is it?

Nimbuzz is a messaging, community, VoIP service and social network aggregator that uses both a downloadable mobile app and mobile web interface as well as a PC web service and client app. They were founded in 2006 and launched earlier this year in May 2008.  Nimbuzz integrates IM (MSN, ICQ etc), VoIP (Skype) as well as social services like Twitter, Facebook and Myspace. They are also rolling out widgets and apps which you can paste into your online profiles to let people contact you via the service, bridging the world of social networks and the mobile.

Nimbuzz are going for an ad-funded business model rather than looking for a share of calling revenue like some of its competitors so everything on the service is free for the end-user.   The aim seems to be to offer a free communications service across voice, messaging and social services.

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Why is it interesting?

There are a lot of competitors offering similar services, like Mig33 for example, which we previously covered here at Mobile Industry Review.  What makes Nimbuzz different is that it is offering a multi-platform service (PC + mobile) but FOCUSING on mobile as the core platform.  This is different from the way that things usually work e.g. a PC-focused player might offer a mobile app or site as an additional platform but not as the core, OR a mobile player just focuses on that platform with no PC presence.

The other thing worth noting about Nimbuzz is the way in which they are
going about promoting the service and building their user base by partnering with major social networks.  They are due to announce a lot of new partnerships over the next few months which will provide them with distribution for Nimbuzz to the millions of users on the various Soc Nets.  No other mobile services provider has done anything like this so far and it will be interesting to see how successful it is as a way of marketing mobile applications.

Nimbuzz is yet another mobile 2.0 service that is getting real traction – it has built up a user base of 2 million users and is currently getting 10k sign-ups every day.  The service has users in 190 countries, which is driven by support for 11 languages (I remember Saul Klein (former Skype director) mentioning in 2005 that a big part of Skype’s success was early support for multiple language so Nimbuzz looks like it’s doing the right things).

In an environment where a lot of web 2.0 startups are making cut backs and struggling to raise new rounds of funding Nimbuzz has a massive war chest as a result of two major funding rounds of $10m (2007) and $15m (2008).  They also have some interesting investors – Mangrove Capital Partners for example were the original investors in Skype whilst Naspers is the South African media company that also funded the mobile service Mxit.

Nimbuzz is definitely one to watch in the world of Mobile 2.0 and it’s great to see something so ambitious in the market.

Right that’s it for this week – see you again next Friday :-)

You can download Nimbuzz and find the Nimbuzz mobile site at mjelly, which is a directory of free mobile software and other stuff

Mocospace – mjelly Mobile 2.0 Service of the Week

Friday, October 31st, 2008

Hi it’s James from mjelly.com, welcome to another “Mobile 2.0 Service of the Week” here at Mobile Industry Review.  So far we’ve looked at three different mobile 2.0 sites or applications Taptu, Peperonity.com and Mig33 – this week its the turn of the mobile social network Mocospace.

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What is it?

Mocospace is a mobile social network with all the usual features – profile pages, forums, chat, buddylists, photosharing, blogging and so on – everything runs off a mobile-optimized website and they also have a basic PC front-end.   Like the name, Mocospace is quite similar to myspace in a lot of ways, including the fact that they have a lot of features around music, for example, users can download new tracks which are now being released on the site.  The seminal hip-hop label Def Jam has a partnership agreement with Mocospace for its artists including LL Cool J, Nas and Ne Yo.  The site has built up a really nice community – users refer to it as “moco” and I’m constantly hearing about how “friendly” a place it is.

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Why is it interesting?

The site was founded in the USA in 2005, before mobile was “trendy” in Silicon Valley and over the last three years they have managed to build something really exciting.  Mocospace is another mobile 2.0 startup that has been able to raise a lot of funding ($7m in total), and it has a heavy weight team including Jim Scheinman who was one of the core people behind the social network Bebo’s success.  What really sets Mocospace apart is that is really has managed to gain a lot of usage and is also making real money.

The numbers are pretty impressive – Mocospace just passed 4m members and is getting 2 bn page views a month with 70% of its traffic coming from the mobile web.  According to Hitwise, Mocospace is the most popular mobile entertainment site in the US and its also the third highest used site by Opera Mini browser users in the United States.  Mocospace is also reporting that it is making “millions” in annual revenues from mobile advertising.

Mocospace has done all this at the same time as the big online social networks (myspace, facebook et al) have rolled out their own mobile sites so there’s pretty clear evidence that mobile-focused services can beat the PC websites at their own game on mobile. The question is, if it can work for social networks what other categories of online services could have their own mobile-focused success stories?

See you next week :-)

You can find mocospace on mjelly, which is a directory of the best mobile sites and other stuff at mjelly.com (PC) and m.mjelly.com (mobile)

Mig 33 – Mobile 2.0 Service of the Week from the mjelly directory

Friday, October 24th, 2008

This is James from mjelly touching down here at Mobile Industry Review for another “Mobile 2.0 Service of the Week”.  So far we’ve looked a two mobile web services – the mobile community Peperonity and the mobile search service Tatpu.  This week we are moving to APPLICATIONS with a look at Mig 33.

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What is it?

Mig33 is like a mobile hybrid of the messaging platform Meebo and the VoIP service Skype, provided as a downloadable Java application for your phone.  The service lets you sign into the various IM services (AIM, MSN, Gtalk, ICQ etc) from your phone.  You can also chat and message in a range of internal chat rooms and use social networking features and photo sharing. Mig33 also enables users to make VoIP calls and send cheap SMS using an internal prepaid credit system.  The company was founded in December 2005 in Australia is now based in the US.

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Why is it interesting?

Mig33 have raised a massive amount of funding for a mobile startup – $23.5m over two rounds from some big hitters including Accel. When you think about it this is a massive vote of confidence in the future of downloadable mobile applications – an investment of this size suggests they are gunning for a huge exit of hundreds of millions of dollars – all from a mobile java app!

The service already has massive traction with over 9m members generating 2m sessions, 45 million messages and 1m pictures shared per day.  Again, the sort of usage mig33 is generating suggests that there really is a big potential market out there for mobile software and apps if you have the right proposition.

Currently most of the mig33 user base is in Asia and developing markets like South Africa and the funding appears to be designed to grow the user-base in the US and Europe and create a service with global scale.  If mig33 can successfully execute it on this plan it will be great news for the mobile apps industry and mobile 2.0 in general.

See you next week :-)

You can download mig33 from mjelly, which is a directory of mobile software and other stuff

“Who” do you think you are using that RAZR camera?

Thursday, October 23rd, 2008

So I went to see the Who last night in Hamilton, EXCELLENT show I must say. For being in their 60’s, Roger & Pete still know how to rock.

The one thing that amazed me (that always amazes me) is people taking pictures with their crappy camera phones. Do they not realize that’s not going to show up? I have an N95, with a 5 megapixel camera, and from 26 rows away, this is what my pictures looked like.

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They aren’t even *that* great.

So what makes people think this tiny little, what does a RAZR have, 1.2 megapixels on a good day? camera is going to take pictures that you can even make something out on? “Look look, there he is, he’s that white square right there!”

Same thing with video & sound clips. The husband had his E62 out trying to record some sound clips, when he got home and listened they were so garbled you could barely make out two words. The only reason why I took pictures (and video, which I’m going to upload tonight) is because I know on an N95, it’s going to turn out at least legible/audible/etc.

Get a better camera phone, or bring a real camera.

(PS, it’s often said that cell phones are the new “lighters” at concerts, you know, slow song, wave your cell phone in the air. Not so at the Who, the lighters were out in full force :)

mjelly directory – Mobile 2.0 Service of the Week – Taptu

Friday, October 17th, 2008

Mobile 2.0 Service of the Week #2 – Taptu

Hello hello it’s James from mjelly again … last Friday we kicked off a new feature for Mobile Industry Review – highlighting a different Mobile 2.0 site or app each week, to give a taste of some of the great next generation mobile stuff out there.

The first mobile 2.0 service we looked at was the mobile site builder and community site Peperonity.  This week we are going to give a quick run-down of the very excellent mobile search service Taptu.

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What is it?

Taptu is a search engine designed specifically for mobile devices and mobile users.  The service focuses on entertainment and content searches (video, images, music), but also covers the web, news, blogs and mobile-optimized sites.  There’s a strong social element to Taptu – you can share the searches via SMS, email or twitter and you can save a list of your friends on the site to make it easy to ping them with stuff.  The site also remembers the searches you have done and recommends things to you to cut down on clicks and browsing around.  Another interesting feature of Taptu is the “I’m bored” button that will serve up something to amuse you from some of the most recent popular searches.  The company is based out of Cambridge UK, was founded in 2005, launched in 2007, and has already won a number of awards.

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Why is it interesting?

Taptu seems to be a very well funded operation and they are investing a lot of this money in really pushing back the boundaries of mobile user experience.  If you browse their mobile site you will see that an incredible amount of care and attention has gone into the navigation, design, layout and copy.  Taptu is perhaps the first mobile web site to really succeed in bringing the clean, functional but beautiful web 2.0 aesthetic to the small screen.  If you are building a mobile web site these guys are the benchmark for design and usability.

The other reason Taptu are worth watching is that they are taking on an absolutely massive opportunity in mobile search – with all guns blazing.   Sooner or later we’ll see the first billion dollar mobile 2.0 acquisition and Taptu could be it.

See you next week for another example of mobile 2.0 goodness.

You can find Taptu on on mjelly, which is a directory of mobile things at mjelly.com on your PC and m.mjelly.com on mobile

3 Branded USB modem router now on sale!

Tuesday, October 14th, 2008

We had this in from Mobile Industry Review reader Trevor.

Just noticed that a 3 branded usb modem router is now for sale on their website:

then click on Wireless routers, £69.99 without a contract – very tempted indeed.

Just look at how small they must be – the Ethernet port looks MASSIVE on the side of the tiny router.

The thought of a portable wireless hotspot anywhere, (especially at Dad’s house, where the 3 coverage is good upstairs, but non existent downstairs – Router upstairs, whole house now covered!) makes this a MUST BUY for me.

More info here

Happy days,

Trevor.

Thanks for the tip Trevor!

The new mJelly Directory

Friday, October 10th, 2008

Hi this is James Coops from mjelly, we’ve just launched a new directory of mobile sites and apps and the good folks at Mobile Industry Review have kindly asked us to do a weekly post highlighting some of the amazing new mobile stuff that we are finding out there.  We’ll be focusing on the so-called mobile 2.0 apps and mobile sites, which combine mobility with some kind of social element, as these are generally the most exciting.

Each week we’ll be showcasing a different site or application for you to check out, either because its innovative in some way, has been very successful or it’s the sort of thing you might want to download or bookmark on your mobile.

To kick off, our mobile 2.0 service this week is Peperonity.

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What is it?

Peperonity is a mobile site builder and community that lets the user create a mobile web site with text, images, files and interactive elements like a guestbook, voting and messaging.  The site is a bit like a hybrid of livejournal and myspace on mobile that makes it really easy to create a website through your phone as a personal page or in an area of interest.  There are also some central community services including a super-busy forum, live chat rooms, a media gallery and so on.  Whilst Peperonity is most definitely “mobile 2.0″ it was actually founded way back in 2001 and survived the mobile internet nuclear winter of 2001-7 without taking any VC funding.

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Why is it interesting?

To be fair, most Mobile Industry Review readers are probably not the target users for Peperonity, which  mainly attracts a younger audience, particularly in the hyper-growth mobile markets like South Africa and India.  However, the site is worth getting to know if you’re in the mobile biz, based on the huge traction that it has achieved.

Pepperonity has the kind of mobile traffic that a lot of big media companies can only dream of, and is claiming over 400m page views a month, over 5 million personal pages have been created on the site and there are now over a million registered users.  (Source: Wap Review).  As a result it is one of the biggest, if not THE biggest driver of inventory on the admob mobile ad network and is rumoured to have a minimum guarantee deal on ad space for over a million US dollars a year.

Despite all this Peperonity has a fairly low profile, even within the mobile industry, and deserves to be more widely known, given that it’s a real benchmark for anyone looking to build a successful mobile internet site.

That’s all for now – see you next week for another mobile 2.0 service :-)

You can find Peperonity on on mjelly, which is a directory of mobile things at mjelly.com on your PC and m.mjelly.com on mobile

iPhone App Review – Zippo and iPint

Tuesday, October 7th, 2008

Michael Selvidge is back giving us some more iPhone App reviews, two that are great, and one…not so much.

So everyone, including Barack Obama, knows that the slickest way to market your product (or candidate) is with a native app for the slickest phone ever, the iPhone.

As traditional forms of advertising like TV, radio, and newspaper slowly die-off, perhaps innovative measures like this are the next solution.

But you have to do it right. Two apps that get it right are Zippo Lighter and Carling’s iPint.

Zippo Lighter, “Lit by Moderati” as it says on the launching screen, is no joke. You get to pick from a selection of colors/patterns for your lighter, the flame moves as you move your phone, and the flame even turns blue and makes the phone vibrate when you hold it upside down. Flicking the lid open gives you a satisfying “click,” and spinning the wheel of the lighter produces a nice flinty “thwick”. It’s actually a genuinely cool app, and even though it’s simple, it’s an app that I haven’t just used once, it’s something that I play with a lot. It came in handy for last week’s Neil Diamond concert (seriously).

Carling’s iPint was actually available at the launch of the App Store, and kudos to them for being on the leading edge. The actual “game” within iPint is only mildly amusing, but pouring and drinking a beer is awesome, and like the Zippo app, it draws “Ooohs” and “Awwws” from all the iPhone uninitiated I show it to. There are several paid beer app called iBeer, but why do we even care to pay when we have iPint for free? Actually, people might pay, because for some reason that I don’t know, iPint is no longer in the App Store. Maybe Apple was thinking of making a competitive beer app and had it pulled?

Living in the US, I had never even heard of Carling. But I Googled them and found out that they are a top UK beer. Even if I may not become a loyal Carling customer, they reached someone in another market and got them interested enough to Google their product. If you’re trying to build awareness for your product, reaching people for the first time who don’t know you is always the hardest.

Lastly, let’s talk about a company who got it all wrong: Audi. I could go on about the Audi A4 Driving Challenge and everything that’s wrong with it, but it’s so awful that I don’t even want to dissect it. Let’s just say that the controls are so wonky that it’s more painful than fun. Between this game and reading the recent tweets from Carlo Longino of MobHappy, my opinion of the Audi brand is at an all time low. Re-badged Volkswagens they are!

So nice work, Zippo and Carlings, two brands with which I now associate the warm fuzzy feelings that come from a slick iPhone app!


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