Posts Tagged ‘Mobile Industry Review’

Taking the Mobile Industry Review show to Kabul, Tehran and Pyongyang

Tuesday, February 3rd, 2009

I’ve had a few emails from people today — and there’s been one comment posted from reader Ant Carroll.

This gist of the feedback has been words to the effect of ‘Rome: Great’ (we’ve just published the preview video of our trip to Italy over the weekend) but what about somewhere REALLY interesting.

Ant commented thus:

As for next MIR city… hmm Kabul perhaps? There’s quite a few interesting mobile stories there to uncover!

I bet there is.

Well, I know there is.

There’s a mobile operator out there in Kabul that we’ve written about now and again. Indeed we even tried to send some flowers (and old feature we used to do every Monday) to John Hadl, founder & CEO of Afghanistan Mobile to say job-well-done.

The last we wrote about Afghanistan, we were telling the planet about the two major networks there hitting 4 million subscribers. This from a country widely assumed by most consumers in the West to have next to no infrastructure to mention.

I’d love to go to Kabul and see what’s going on with their mobile marketplace. Nowadays more than ever — in this uber-connected worldwide society — the ability to remain connected, whether for safety, commerce or family — is becoming more and more important. Witness, for example, the explosion of handsets and associated innovative services across Africa.

Kabul would need a lot of money. Not least to cover the daily fees of 6x Blackwater Worldwide former SAS paratroopers to help keep us — literally — in one piece in order to be able to bring you some coverage.

I suspect the Foreign Office here in Britain would think us off-our-heads. And I doubt the Afghanistan Tourist Board — if there is such an organisation — would be that impressed to hear from us. I think we’d be a little bit of a distraction.

The Foreign Office doesn’t specifically say it’s a crazy idea:

# We strongly advise against all travel to the Sarobi District of the Kabul province.
# We strongly advise against all but essential travel to Kabul.

Doable?

Perhaps Afghanistan is a little bit too far. It’s all too easy to live this cosseted life from the reasonably peaceful United Kingdom where the biggest threat today is slipping in the snow. Perhaps we should stick to what we sort-of know.

I am keen on a visit to Tehran, capital of Iran. Again, I don’t quite think their tourist board — or Foreign Office — would be that impressed either.

Likewise, the North Korean authorities.

You never know. I think there would be spectacular consumer mobile stories to capture in these countries. *Specatcular*.

What’s your opinion?

The biggest barrier to us is the actual cost of arranging, getting and staying. Right now we don’t have any companies supporting our MIR Show coverage — it’s me that’s paying for it all — and hiring a few SAS types on £2,500 a day would begin to put a real dent in the MIR finances.

Plus, you can’t exactly book a trip to Kabul on Expedia.

Or can you?

Let’s have a look.

No, you can’t:

Drop me an email if you’d like to help send us to Kabul ;-)

More updates to Mobile Industry Review

Wednesday, January 14th, 2009

I had another field-day this evening with sodding cascading style sheets on Mobile Industry Review.

Eventually I just stuck in some tables and woosh, it worked. I will arse about with the CSS to try and make it work another time.

Here’s the latest update:

I’ve split the news stories down the left and made a central column for stuff like our upcoming events and the latest MIR Show episodes.

I changed around the top right-hand box again — that we added last night — and made it 100% content focused:

We’ll aim to change that content weekly — apart from the daily ShoZu bit.

For the heathens still running on 1024×768 resolutions, I changed the width back down to 950 from 1010 pixels yesterday. It should work now.

Quick fact? 23% of the MIR audience run their systems on 1024 pixel resolutions. The vast majority — 63% — use resolutions much higher than this with 1280×800 being the most popular (25%), followed by 1280×1024 (15%).

Still lots of work to do on the site. If you’ve any recommendations, shoot me a note.

Submit a post to Mobile Industry Review

Friday, December 19th, 2008

We’ve added a new feature here at MIR.

It’s a Submit A Post page.

If you’ve got a burning issue that you’d like to talk about, or if you’ve got some news about your company, product or service, you can now submit it directly to us at Mobile Industry Review.

It’s conceivable no one will use it.

Similarly, it’s conceivable some people will.

If you’d like something published on MIR, then this is your shortcut way to it. You don’t need to email us to get permission.

Simply give it a go.

We’ve put some initial guidelines at the top of the page. To be clear, there’s no guarantee we’ll publish submitted posts but, we’ll definitely take a look at every single one.

Have a look at the page here.

Mobile Industry Review is the 18th most clipped site

Tuesday, December 16th, 2008

Get in!

I only just found this.

Back on the 21st of November, the chaps at UKNetMonitor put together an analysis of the sites that they believe to be ‘relevant, significant and influential’ in the context of the news clipping and monitoring that they do for their clients. They ended up with 100 sites that they’ve regularly clipped interesting posts from.

Talk to UKNetMonitor if you’re wanting a comprehensive overview of what your customers (and wannabe customers) are saying about you.

Here’s what they had to say:

It’s that time of year when we review where we have found what believe to be relevant, significant and influential comments about our clients. Not a serious analysis but here is our league table of the top 100 sites we have clipped from in the last 12 months. Watching the web underlines the enormous diversity of opinion that is being expressed and read online. Not really a comment on Web 2.0, but what is clear is the rise of the social networks, and the continued dominance of the discussion forums over straight blogs as the crucibles of where corporate reputations are being made and broken, where products are hyped or trashed. Unsurprisingly, these are also the hardest to keep a handle on, and highlight the weakness of relying on a few Google to Alerts as an effective approach to web monitoring. Anyway, here is the top 100 websites we have clipped interesting posts from this year. For all you webmasters and moderators out there, the message is “It’s worth it. Some-one is listening”.

Brand Republic, BBC.co.uk, Telecom.Paper, Discussions.Apple.com… right on.

Here’s a snapshot of where we appear:

Obviously we’re quoted under our old name, SMS Text News.

View the full top 100 list here.

The Mobile Industry Review Awards: Monday

Friday, October 10th, 2008

We’re recording the Mobile Industry Review Awards — both the nominations and the winners — tonight.

I’ve just overseen the creation of our fancy envelopes with the results inside.

SHHHH. Can’t tell you who’s won.

Dan Lane, Ben Smith and James Whatley will be presenting alternate categories, listing out the nominations — and then ripping open the envelope, announcing the winner — and then explaining our reasoning.

It’s been a bit of a while coming. The final deliberations took us something like 4 hours. But we’re done and we’re live on Monday.

I think it will probably have to be a separate video from the usual Monday show — so expect two on Monday.

The Mobile Industry Review iPhone Application – ideas?

Thursday, August 7th, 2008

I’m working on the idea of creating an iPhone application for our site.

We don’t obviously need it. There’s a web version, for example.

But it’s worth playing with, isn’t it?

Trouble is, I’m at a bit of a loss about what we could do with an iPhone application for the site. My ideas are thus:

1. RSS reader. So it’ll display the news.
2. Display the headlines in a rotating manner or flickable manner — like the new features box we’ve got on the frontpage. Would be nice to have pics.
3. Some kind of comments integration.
4. Maybe an iPhone shout-out facility that publishes one-liner sentences?
5. An ability to take a picture via the application and send it to us for publication (if you see something good and mobile related).
6. A survey/voting function.

Any ideas?


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