Sun dog 7910
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People make predictions of the mobile future in 2009. Here are a few good ones here.

Strands consulting take the safe road with their predictions which gives a feeling of credibility. The text covers a wide area of mobility and gives an honest compilation of knowledge. This text probably has lots of work behind it. Read the full article of Mobile Trends 2009 here.

If you are like me and specially interested in Mobile Internet Services, Rudy de Waele gives his predictions at m-trends.org. He gives loots of good examples of Mobile Internet Services that are on the bleeding edge today and points out where they are going in 2009.

Wapreview also belives in an iphone nano appearing in 2009. Read Dennis Bourniques list of 10 things for 2009.

Direct and measurable predictions comes from Mobhappy. Pinpointing some players that will fail and some initiatives to succeed.

Giving us 10 predictions in a quick list are mjelly.com.

Sarah Keefe at bango.com allready has one of her five predictions in a box, and the year has just began.

Breaking the pattern and only giving 2 predictions, but good ones, are Dan at Dan’s blog (2.0)

If you are more of a survey guy, the 20 questions answered by experts in the industry you want to read follow the link to this summary. Which also holds a nice safe list of what will NOT hit us in 2009.

The evolvement of mobile services in India will be extremely interesting to view. India will make use of the mobility in the upcoming elections 2009. Read about the Predictions for the Indian market here.

As the sun sets on 2008 my strong believe is that mobile life 2009 will NOT be boring.

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My iPhone Screens 22/10/2008
Image by Sigalakos via Flickr

It is important that mobile internet services that aims to support you or entertain you in your mobile life really fits in to your everyday life. We talked earlier about personalization of services and this a topic that borders that. If a service is to general you need to make lots of adjustments to make it fit into the task you want to use it for.

As an example, lets take Sony Ericssons Tracker application. It helps you keep track of your jogging times, rounds, positions and average speeds. This could be done by an ordinary positioning tool but it would take more work on your account.

Mobile services(apart from Iphone users) has not yet stepped into the world of niches, the ordinary web is full of niche services. Services that are really useful to a specific niche of users, and pointless to all others. There are a lot of mobile niche services to be discovered or invented in the mobile arena and this area is finally starting to evolve.

Luckily Apple saw the opportunity to take the lead in this race. The App store enables niche services on the web to enter the mobile arena in a simple way, this has woken the other players. Nobody wants to be left behind and we will see many more App stores arise in 2009.

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An example of a social network diagram.
Image via Wikipedia

You bring your mobile everywhere! Mobile service providers need to take this into account. You are on the move, at home, at lunch, at work, shopping etc. There are many mobile internet services that would benefit and serve your mobile life better, by taking into account the position and activity of the user.

I am well aware of the legal and technical problems involved in knowing where users are and how to use this. But there are always solutions and you as a customer get a better mobile life out of it.

 

Yellow arrow

The New york started Yellow Arrow art project, let you combine your physical position with your mobile. Uniquely-coded yellow stickers mark interesting objects, places or views. An SMS to the yellow arrow number with the code from the sticker give you as a user information about the object. This is a fairly low-tech solution for using location of the user to the users advantage but it is still effective for the niche it addresses. The fact that the you as a user choose when your position can be used to your advantage is crucial to avoid the feeling of surveillance.

Social networks and positioning

The social networks trend on the web has opened up a golden opportunity to take positioning to the next level, playing on the relationship you have with your friends and your curiosity. The Android applications like CompareEverywhere, BreadCrumbz and locale that take location into account in a smart manner will hopefully inspire other mobile service providers. We will follow this mobile trend with big interest.

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Glinski's hexagonal chess, a chess variant pop...
Image via Wikipedia

The purpose of a mobile internet service is to serve you AND it should do so in the best possible way. The last part is seldom done. When you think about it, wouldn’t it be nice if a service learned from your behavior. for example, you probably know some services by heart, like you know your way home. You start the service, scroll down and click that link, wait for loading, scroll down again and click again, finally. This is your personal starting point of the service and the service should learn tat.

Classic personalization

Sitting at your computer you have access to personalized start pages on Internet and Intranet via Widgets, settings, RSS etc and even what your friends like. This is the type of personalization that most people think about. Don’t get me wrong I am all for that, but it does take time and effort from the user and that is one reason many people just don’t bother to personalize. The nature of mobile phones and mobile internet services call for more personalization but it is even harder to encourage that kind of effort from the user. One solution to ease things up in your mobile life, is to enable all personalization work to be done on the web.

Automatic personalization

The Mobile is personal which and all actions taken can be assumed is taken by you. This means that you are making patterns of usage on the server side of the mobile internet service you use. This fact is can be used to make the service better for you. Even in isolated applications and games, with no server connection, this approach could also be used. When you have answered “No, I dont want to play my chess game with sound” five times in a row the game should learn this, and make it a default setting to have at every time you start your game of chess.
This is simple and straight forward usage of your usage in a certain service, and there is no reason mobile service providers should not already have this implemented. For the mobile future there are lots of more advanced automatic personalization to be done. Yes, there is a risk that users get offended by the big brother approach so it must be dealt with gently.

Services that learn from user patterns and make qualified guesses to serve the user better exists on the Internet. Several success stories(Amazon, Google suggest, last.fm, pandora.com) bring out this as a way to serve the user better than others do.
This is a development born from competition and technology. In the mobile service industry, we don´t really see that level of competition yet. When that time comes, that is in 2009, you will see smarter services that adapts to your mobile life, as you use it.

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Google Mobile Maps on my K750i
Image by RTPeat via Flickr

Mobile Internet services are seldom as well designed as its more grownup equals. This is a strange phenomenon since it should be the other way around. Your mobile is always just a few seconds away and is constantly a potential channel for a service. The task of delivering a service in the mobile channel is not taken seriously, maybe it is due to a classic catch 22 situation. The mobile version of a service has fewer users than the web version so it gets less attention. The mobile version gets less attention so it never reaches its full potential and don’t attract enough users.

Mobile TV

Take TV in the mobile as an example. You never accept being fed commercial spots on the mobile in the same way as you accept on TV. Sitting in front of your TV set you either endure the spot, leave the room with the spot running in the background or you switch to another program. You never plan to watch commercials, but still many companies feed you their message every evening. In the mobile it is a different challenge. You will never accept being force fed commercials in the same way. Delivering TV in the mobile channel needs mobile thinking combined with core knowledge of traditional TV business. The best Mobile TV solution I have seen so far is the 3Mobile-TV but even that struggles with content rights and a traditional mindset in the TV industry.

Mobile positioning

Another example Nokias efforts in the world of GPS and positioning. Really cool technology but not nearly as user experience as a specialized GPS service provides. It is obvious that Nokia has a deep technical knowledge but lack expertise in the positioning field. Being a company used to deliver quality they realized this and bought the map company Navteq. For the same reasons, I suspect, Vodafone put down the money(239 million swedish kronors) for Wayfinder. We are in for an interesting fight in this field as the giants(Microsoft, Google, Apple, Nokia, Vodafone, Garmin) fight to define the mobile trends. It will put you, as a user, in the focus.

Too Techy

The technology develops fast. It is hard for the “soft” market people, with business minds, to understand the possible and impossible of mobile Internet services. Things change every day. The challenge is to make “soft” people work closely with technology people and force them to communicate. Finding a balance between tech focus and business focus is difficult but if the tech people continue to rule, the mobile Internet services will not.

Time to service is of essence

You get irritated at slow services on the web that forces you to slow down in your mobile life. The same things applies, naturally, on the mobile. I read a survey claiming that “Users of mobile services are not as sensitive and are willing to wait a bit longer than on the web” This might be true, you don’t abandon the service directly, but you still want it to be as fast as possible. You will abandon the service if another service is faster and equally good. It should be a given that you use Wikipedia on your mobile instead of making a call, to cheat on the traditional quiz-walk at the Swedish midsummer party.

That it takes longer to do a search at wikipedia on the mobile than on the web is not good promotion for using that service in your mobile life. Sure you have some delays related to networks and you always have the starting of the browser as a consumer of time but apart from that, what is the problem? Picking on Wikipedia is not my goal, it is just an example of not serving you as a customer in the best way in your mobile life.

Mobile music

In the case of mobile music services it gets interesting. I am very well aware that music in the mobile is a complex area due to copyrights and the high per-song-revenue the right owners combined with record labels want. It is obvious that users consume more and more music on their mobiles. The critical factor “time-to-music” on your mobile phone is as low as on your MP3-player and the mobile channel is winning that battle.

But anyone who has visited a music service knows that playing music is only the last piece of the puzzle. Discovering music and finding the music you are looking for are important pieces as well. This is an area with lots of more improvements to be made. The users are still stuck in the MP3-player habit of loading new music from computers, making computers the preferred channel for the service of discovering and finding new music. What will it take to change this to fit your mobile life? PlayNow from Sony Ericsson, Nokia Comes With Music and 3Music are good starting points.

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