Archive for the ‘mobile’ Category

Technology can empower the ‘have nots’: thoughts for a Monday

Monday, October 19th, 2009

First one

Well, for this section: it’s the thoughts of Richard Holway, eminent tech industry analyst:

Roaming

(By Richard Holway Saturday 17th Oct 09) Back in 2003, I introduced my ‘Martini Moment’ theme – basically the ultimate aim was to be able to access the internet ‘anyplace, anytime and from any device’. Since then I have excitedly reported achieving this on land, at sea and in the air. I guess listening to the Archers on my laptop in a junk in the Mekong Delta/Vietnam three years ago was the point where I realised my Martini Moment had arrived. Since then I have reported on ever more remote locations where I have been able to gain internet access. Indeed, in all my travels since, to India, China, Korea etc, I have rarely been out of mobile internet range for more than a hour or two.

This week we have been visiting Egypt and Jordan . Here I expected good internet access in the main cities. But on one trip we travelled by truck for 4 hours into the Jordanian desert. We ate dinner in a Bedouin camp. Only candles lit the campsite so we could experience the blackest of skies twinkling with a million stars. But wait…what is that other glow I see? All around me the Bedouins were on their mobile phones! It was only later that I spotted the tallest mobile mast I have ever seen right in the middle of the desert – indeed the only man made structure I could see!

Cairo has some pretty awful slums. Many of the 18m inhabitants live in squalid conditions without water or sewage. But, yet again, everyone seems to have a mobile phone. The shanty towns may not have had flush toilets but they all seemed to have a satellite dish!

At the moment, most of these very poor people use basic mobile phones but I’m certain that in a few years smartphones will be the norm here too. That provides a powerful computing device in the hands of the poorest in the land. I know how access to the internet has revolutionised my own life and that of my kids and grandchildren. But they are the ‘haves’ of this world. Wouldn’t it be great to think that those advantages, that information revolution, might at last come to the ‘have nots’ too?

Second One

This is taken from an article in The Economist about Cloud Computing:

“Battle of the clouds […] The fight to dominate cloud computing will increase competition and innovation”

This comment (I’m assuming it’s genuine points towards a similar scenario to that of mobile phones – i.e. developing countries don’t need a landline infrastructure, they can use mobiles instead…:

dont take yourself seriously wrote:

Thu, 2009-10-15 12:54

I recently completed a course on IT project management and I could say that I got more out of this course than what I signed up for.

Reason: I am Ethiopian… and I know the hassles that one has to endure to setup the necessary hardware just to be "connected" both internally and to the world.

I see cloud computing as the wave of the future, especially for Africa where the Mobile technology has already helped us leapfrog and reach higher levels of efficiency and productivity without the pain of investing heavily on IT infrastructure.

Hope more African and other developing nations get this message and jump on the band wagon, cause viola’ there is no need for heavy lifting anymore … you can get it out there!

Something positive for you, then… :-D

How Teenagers consume media and other stories

Friday, July 24th, 2009

Last week there was a bit of a to-do when a teenager, working as a Summer intern at the investment bank Morgan Stanley, was suddenly propelled to his 15 minutes of fame by the MS PR machine. His report below was published and kicked off a mini media storm (well ok, some City analysts were interested).

Great spot by my former colleague David Gentle:

@justingsouter http://bit.ly/8phZA did you see this about teens? fascinating!

[btw, it’s worth clicking on the ‘full screen’ button on the top right of the Scribd widget, as it makes the documents easier to read. Click on the cross (again top right) to close full screen mode].

How Teenagers Consume Media

To be fair, these are concise and interesting observations, and not having any bairns of my own, and Caroline’s having "flown the nest", for me it’s insight. Perhaps it’s also a minor tipping point in terms of Social Media being taken seriously?

In the spirit of balance, Roo Reynolds gives a rather fine round-up of contrarian view to young Matthew – How teenagers consume media, apparently.

Another report, this time from Nielsen, paints a different picture – which would appear to warm the cockles of traditional broadcasters etc.:

Nielsen Study: How Teens Use Media (June 2009) — Read in "Full Screen" Mode

So, overall some food for thought, as these are the Consumer of the future (and present, of course!).

Lengthen how long your Blackberry rings for

Monday, January 5th, 2009

BlackBerry Bold 9000

Photo credit to Dushaun

I tweeted last week about a blog post I’d found which suggests how to get your Blackberry to ring a little longer than the too short default setting.

This is because I also can’t find any way to change the Blackberry Bold config. itself, which is a bit odd – it was a straightforward setting on all the Nokias I have used in the past.

However, Caroline reported that the code I’d used meant that calls were not going through to voicemail, so I thought I’d post what I’ve found out subsequently.

I spoke with a very helpful lady from UK Vodafone over the weekend, and I understand that the code is:

**61*YOUR VOICEMAIL NUMBER HERE*10*30#

You put this code into the phone applet, characters and all, and then press the green ’send’ button. You should get a message back from the network.

N.b. the voicemail number is different from your mobile number. Voicemail format is [e.g.] +447978123456 – i.e. include the +44 at the beginning, and knock off the initial zero.

Also fyi the 30 at the end is the length of time for the phone to ring before it goes to voicemail – in seconds. I believe you can increment it down in 5 second intervals (e.g. replace 30 with 20 if you want 20 seconds before ring out).

I found my own voicemail number on my Bold by going into:

Phone applet | Options | Call Forwarding | Forward Unanswered Calls

Hope this helps! If not, please leave a message below – thanks!