Archive for July, 2010

Mobile and the Arts

Wednesday, July 28th, 2010

One of the brothers that I sit with is a poet. He and I have a great time talking about many of the topics that he comes up with and how these topics many times just come out of nowhere. From time to time, we’ll start on a meme and prose starts to flow as the language of our conversations. And it never fails that neither of us records or writes it down. It lasts for a moment, and the memory of the experience is great, but we both know that it would be great to capture that moment, and look at it later for wisdom and recollection.

In the same vein, I always wonder about those moments with the other arts, where we are there to observe, but many times don’t think to take the opportunity to record a snippet (video, audio, or still image) of the opportunity. Yes, there are some moments where social rules or even a stated request might prohibit such recording, but when it permissible, how often do we take in some of those moments for recollection?

If you do collect those moments, how do you share it either with yourself in the future, or with others? Does it even matter that it is even something you can view/hear later, or does just the moment to archive that event pass as just what was needed? I know that I find myself looking back on images, poetry, and even music from years ago every so often to train my memory not to forget, but I’ve also noticed that there are some stores of media that I rarely go back to – its like I captured them for the moment, but it’s becoming a bit of an unused/unreferenced digital pile.

Going a bit back to the title: is mobile a valuable tool to use to capture the art of the moment? Do you find it enriching for you or others to use mobile in those moments.

 

Carnival of the Mobilists

Thursday, July 22nd, 2010

We’ve talked about the Carnival of the Mobilists (CotM) many times here before. But, I’d really like to plug it again in light of yesterday’s post about marketing and development in mobile. If you want to be a few steps ahead of the market – or a few steps behind it making a better product – the opinions and analysis shared each week with the Carnival of the Mobilists is hard to beat. You really do hear from the thought leaders and companies in mobile.

Check out the Carnival this week at WIP Connector. To follow where it will be each week, I’d recommend following the CotM on Twitter.

 

Booting into the Mobile Cloud

Tuesday, July 20th, 2010

I have recently goins back to using a mobile web server on my primary device. Unfortunately, I have also started using several more mobile devices (a few to own a few more to review). One of the challenges that I keep running into is this idea of keeping data synchronized between devices.

Usually, I like what’s possible with the Symbian devices I have. There is an application on it called Phone Switch which can sync browser bookmarks, contacts, calendar entries, and a few other system files. Generally speaking, this works out very well. The problem comes when I am looking to move to another platform, for example, the use of three Google Android devices currently.

With these devices, I have to take a different outlook. Since I do not sync into a PC, I would need to leverage my Google Account and sync information to those devices with them. Now, I could go the route of syncing all of the info from my Symbian devices with Google, but I have not at this point. What I do sync with these devices is email and a few specific contacts.

This is good, but I often end up with situations where I don’t have the rig data or content that I need, and even my business card which sits on my mobile web server, because I’m not necessarily using these devices and serves to the best of their abilities to date.

Therefore, I am increasingly looking at certain types of cloud services which can handle my jumping between various devices, and I’m starting to notice something pretty neat – there’s a lot of energy around not just cloud serves, but how we best want to use them.

I think back to the time at Uplinq and a conversation with a representative from  Funambol , and her question about how services such as Funambol can work alongside personal and organizational sets of data. Much like how I am taking one core set of info and using across several devices, services such as Funambol look to the cloud (the internet and different network services) and these devices to present something that delivers consistent information when you need it.

Microsoft Exchange is another type of service which is able to take information from mobile and PC devices, and then serve it to what devices you need. Like Funamobl, this is a paid service, but is more likely to be used and managed in a larger enterprise setting. I used to use this a lot, but information policies and guidelines (some of which I participated in developing) had me adopt it to a deeper level.

The challenge is finding services and content which works everywhere, but that also respects your privacy and enables enough of an ability to connect that you never feel limited. Google has a great handle on this, and to some degree Facebook, Yahoo, and MSN. There are still a few too many hoops for me to jump thru. Maybe not for some who manage fewer devices and types of content.

It is really interesting though to see the push for mobile devices to be much better supported. Content and access are much less in a silo with mobile. And cost of data access (time, as well as economics) is going to be a question to those in sparsely populated areas, or those who travel often internationally.

Funambol has a really neat solution for individuals and smaller organizations in respect to these. MS Exchange is better for larger groups. And Google seems to do well in filling in the blanks. I need to figure out something, so that I can better boot into using the information that I need in the most efficient manner.

 

Wading Through Reading Interfaces

Saturday, July 17th, 2010

In the years since MMM has been inked and online, there have been several types of interfaces posed as what’s next. In a slideshow shared at SlideShare, the idea of interactive reading and its accompanying devices and interfaces as it’s changed in this new century are explored.

A friend asked me yesterday what Bible application that he should choose to use for his iPad. I didn’t just have a question to him of whether he wanted something for reading or studying, but also how he planned to interact with the content. This is the kind of decision that digital interfaces will add to the decision process around reading. For developers, its going to be an interesting set of challenges to play with. For readers, well, what kind of stroke do you use to swim through content?