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Mobile Portland Meeting on Monday

Wednesday, March 19th, 2008

The first Mobile Portland meeting is scheduled for this coming Monday. eROI has graciously offered to host us. Our topic this month: the iPhone SDK.

Here are the topics we’re going to cover:

  • What is the iPhone SDK and how to get it
  • Introduction to the SDK and how to develop with it
  • Web development with the new SDK and new Safari features
  • iPhone SDK limitations and controversy

We’re very excited to have Nick Jacobsen to lead our conversation about iPhone application development. He’s been working with the iPhone for several months now and can speak to the advantages and limitations of the SDK.

After Nick talks about application development, I’m going to talk about the impact of the SDK on web development. It looks like we’ll have a good balance between application and web focus so there should be something for everyone.

Details

Monday, March 24th, 6 pm
eROI, 505 NW Couch, Suite 300
Portland, OR 97209
Map | RSVP | Add to your Calendar

Join our Google Group

We’ve started a Google Group for Mobile Portland to coordinate on meetings and also share development insights between meetings. Please join us at http://groups.google.com/group/mobile-portland.

Mobile Tsunami Presentation

Wednesday, February 20th, 2008

You can now view the slides from my presentation on the upcoming Mobile Tsunami at Portland Web Innovators last week including an audio recording or presenter notes.

If you would prefer presenter notes, you can find them on the SlideShare web site in the comments.

Thank you to Ryan Williams for inviting me to speak, Portland Web Innovators for organizing the event, Nemo Design for being such gracious hosts and for the free beer, and for the large number of people who took time the time to attend the presentation.

Mobile Portland User Group

Thursday, February 14th, 2008

At Portland Web Innovators last night, we announced the formation of a new user group called Mobile Portland.

The idea for Mobile Portland came from our desire to have a place to share what we’re learning and collaborate with other mobile developers. The idea took hold when during a conversation with Jon Maroney of Free Range Communications after the recent PAF panel on mobile marketing.

In addition to Free Range, early enthusiastic collaborators for a local mobile user group include individuals from eROI, GoLife Mobile and bBoing (a.k.a., Summit Projects). We’re pleased that we’ve got a group of people interested in making this happen.

It seems like the last thing Portland needs is yet another user group meeting. However, mobile development has numerous unique challenges. These challenges deserve their own attention and focus.

We’re still working out logistics on how Mobile Portland will work. If you’re interested, go to mobileportland.com to be notified about our first meeting.

Short on Specifics

Monday, February 11th, 2008
This is the fourth post in a multi-part series on the mobile web that previews some of the topics for my presentation next week at the Portland Web Innovators Forum. RSVP for the event here.

Now that you understand the size of the mobile market and the fact that it is ripe for explosive growth, what should your business’s mobile strategy be?

The answer is: no one knows for certain.

The reason why many businesses don’t have a mobile strategy is because mobile is long on potential and short on specifics.

The specific strategies that will be successful for your business are varied and many are unproven. We can look at compelling case studies like:

These case studies show what is possible when you combine the right strategy with mobile-optimized content. But in both cases, you would be hard pressed to argue that either Blyk or ESPN are following proven strategies.

Instead, mobile is most reminiscent of the early days of the Internet when companies were just beginning to think about how this new technology might transform their industries. This period was full of experimentation as everyone rapidly tried to figure out how to build successful businesses and corporate strategies in this new world.

Our experiments will be better this time around because we have better infrastructure. We can draw on the lessons we’ve learned over the last decade. And we will be better equipped to measure our success.

But just like the early days of the Internet, those companies that are forward-looking—the companies that take risks and explore what is possible—will be rewarded with an early lead in this emerging market.

Long on Potential

Monday, February 11th, 2008
This is the third post in a multi-part series on the mobile web that previews some of the topics for my presentation next week at the Portland Web Innovators Forum. RSVP for the event here.

In the last post in this series, we examined the size of the mobile market and how mobile adoption dwarfs that of television, PCs and automobiles. With such a large market, why aren’t more businesses working on their mobile strategies?

One reason why many businesses haven’t taken the mobile industry seriously is because we’ve heard the story before. Every couple of years mobile carriers or phone manufacturers would tout the soon-to-be-released dream of a smart mobile device in your pocket.

The title of my last post quoted Dr. Eli Harai of San Disk who recently called mobile the mother of all markets. But this isn’t the first time the mobile market has been called that.

In 1992, then Apple CEO John Sculley told the New York Times that “pocket-sized digital communicating devices” could be “the mother of all markets.”

Fool me once.

For the last few years, mobile phones adoption has out-paced other technologies. So the widespread adoption of mobile phones alone isn’t enough to warrant new optimism.

What’s changed that makes 2008 different than 1992 or even 2006 when it comes to realizing the mobile potential?

  • The iPhone’s easy-to-use interface.
  • Full web browsing experiences led by iPhone’s Safari browser and Opera.
  • Flat-rate data plans.
  • Phones with Wi-Fi support built-in and the many public Wi-Fi hotspots
  • The push for open platforms—whether truly open like Google’s Android mobile operating system or the pressure that led Apple to release an iPhone SDK.
  • The push for open networks including the open network requirements placed on the recent wireless spectrum auction and the commitment by major U.S. carriers to be open networks by the end of 2008.

Momentum in the mobile market has accelerated to such a degree that not a day goes by that there isn’t another company releasing some major new initiative. Today alone, AOL announced a mobile platform, Nokia launched a major mobile advertising platform, and Microsoft bought Danger, Inc., the producers of the HipTop/Sidekick phones.

There is still work to be done and the question remains whether 2008 will be a transition year or the year mobile technology skyrockets. But it is no longer possible to look around and conclude that mobile isn’t poised to take off.

It used to be that when people would tout what was possible with mobile phones, we had to look no further than our own phones for a harsh reality check. Now when someone pulls out their iPhone, Blackberry or Nokia N95, the future seems a lot closer than it ever has before.