Friday, June 29, 2007

Anyone can type FASTER on a normal cell phone than on a IPhone

Use Google Number Search.

Technology, sad to say, is going to the wrong uses. The .COM button that appears on the IPhone's keyboard (when in browser mode) should be on regular cell phone handsets.
Apple should realize that its QWERTY and 'smart' keyboard is a thumb-soring exercise in futility.

The wheel has already been invented...and Google, smirking, is sitting on gold, waiting to re-release GNS.

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Sunday, June 17, 2007

Youtube goes mobile

Youtube has gone mobile at m.youtube.com, which takes a total of 15 keytaps to execute - excluding the 'm' and '.com'.

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Friday, June 15, 2007

Wordnumbers on NBC?

The following was a question on the NBC gameshow '1 vs. 100' from episode 4 that aired on November 3, 2006, and re-run on June 15, 2007:

If you wanted to punch in "NBC" on a phone keypad, what numbers should you press?
a) 522
b) 622
c) 722

The correct answer - 'b' - was selected by 61 of 84 members of the 'mob.'

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Thursday, June 14, 2007

The Rise of Numeric Domains

The Rise of Numeric Domains
By Scott Smith
TechNewsWorld
June 12, 2007

With more than 4 billion cell phones in use worldwide -- 487 million in China alone -- it's no wonder that "mobile" is all the rage.

A recent segment of "American Idol" received nearly 80 million text message votes. The 2008 U.S. presidential candidates are incorporating mobile communications elements into their campaigns. Social networks such as MySpace and Twitter are starting to deploy mobile-friendly Web sites. Most mobile access is achieved via traditional methods such as wireless carrier "walled garden" decks, short codes, text messaging and often lengthy, convoluted sub-domains.

It begs the question: Is there a simpler, perhaps more powerful mobile access and branding that has largely gone unnoticed?

The Internet and the cell phone are colliding as the media evolve to satisfy our need to socialize and to share information. Personalized mobility will become the norm. If people are going to access Web sites via cell phones, why not make it easy by using numbers instead of letters?

Numeric Domains 101

On billions of cell phones worldwide, the dial pad numbers 2 through 9 can represent letters of the alphabet. The numeral 2 can represent "a," "b" or "c." The "7" button can represent "p," "q," "r" or "s," etc.

Therefore, any string of numbers can represent multiple alpha equivalents. The numbers 3776 can represent 144 alpha combinations (3 can represent d, e or f; 7 can represent p, q, r or s; 6 can represent m, n or o). The numbers 3776 could represent "Esso;" it could also represent "ESPN" or 142 other unique alpha combinations.

On your cell phone WAP (wireless application protocol) browser, entering a numeric string and adding ".com" creates a numeric domain.

Until the domain is specifically purposed, it's just that -- a string of numbers, no trademark issues and no squatting issues.

Organizations incorporate numeric domains into their overall marketing mix depending on their respective goals and strategies:

* The numeric domain is the brand. Some of the world's most popular Web sites use numeric-domains as their primary Web sites, including 163.com, 126.com, 888.com and 51.com.

Numeric domains can be the brand or help to strengthen the brand. The numeric feature can clearly indicate that the WAP site has been specifically formatted for optimum viewing and navigation on cell phones.

* Simple input. It's much easier to enter 3776 (.com) -- four input clicks -- than it is to enter a lengthy sub-domain required to get to the same Web site such as mobileapp.espn.go (.com), requiring 32 input clicks.

Numeric-domains reduce keypad input clicks, thereby reducing input error, frustration and abandonment. Numeric-domains are handheld device, wireless carrier, language and location agnostic.

* Reduce dependency on wireless carrier "decks." Wireless carriers offer premium content (ringtones, music, etc.) to their customers via "on-deck" portals, or "walled gardens." Content providers typically pay dearly to list and sell their content on-deck, yet have little influence over location, positioning and the amount of promotion done by the carrier.

Numeric domains allow content providers a direct link to their customers and full control of and responsibility for the user experience.

* Exert more consumer influence. Wireless carriers play a crucial role in the wireless Internet ecosystem. However, the growing migration of content owners bypassing wireless carriers' expensive billing costs to deliver content direct to consumer is rampant.

Numeric domains enable direct-to-consumer access and a wide variety of payment options.

* Short code avoidance, direct-to-consumer delivery. Carrier-controlled short codes are not owned by the content providers. Codes are rented on a monthly basis, can take months to secure and typically are used only for short "campaign" durations.

Organizations that own their numeric domain enjoy longer lead times for planning campaigns and can associate the numeric domain with, and strengthen, their brand.

* Short codes restrictions. Short codes are geographically restricted to the reach of the carrier network. This is usually not a problem for local or regional campaigns. However, for international campaigns, companies need to schedule, manage and pay for multiple short codes.

Numeric domains are equal in the entire global community. The code 3776 is the same in Beijing, Boston or Bali. This ensures that anyone anywhere on the planet with a WAP browser and network access can reach your Web anytime, day or night.

Why are numeric domains only surfacing now? Perhaps for a number of reasons -- fear of the unknown, early-adopter reluctance and the evolving technical expertise to deliver a "beyond expectations" mobile user experience.

The "wireless" Internet is in its embryonic stages. Access methods such as short codes and text messaging were designed and developed by the carriers and touted by the service providers and/or aggregators. Not surprisingly, each step incorporated substantial profit centers for the emerging cabals. Want a short code? Want to send a text message? Want your content delivered to wireless subscribers? Want that application preloaded on these phones? If so, you're forced to pay the piper.

A Place in the Ecosystem

Major brands that could afford the higher costs often followed the advice of ad agencies and aggregators. Wireless is new. How do we get into the game and measure results? What will it cost?

The answers, and the solutions, were proffered and spoon-fed by the aggregators, ad agencies and the carriers. With substantial mass-media advertising, the result became the accepted way to communicate a message, engage the consumer and to sell a product or service.

The industry is maturing and there are alternatives available that many people may not be aware of. However, if embraced and employed, these new tools could dramatically improve on current industry practices.

Will numeric domains find a prominent place in the wireless ecosystem? It would seem so. Reported sales of numeric-domains have exploded recently. 15.com just sold for US$100,000, 20.com sold for $75,000, and dozens of others have traded for over $100,000 in private sales.

Many companies are learning the value, ease of use and versatility numeric domains. As more and more Web and WAP sites -- such as the recently launched 41414.com and the heavily venture capital-backed www.80108.com jump into the fray, it would appear that the numbers are heating up.

Have you got your number?

Scott Smith is president and CEO of ArcNum and cochairs the off-portal committee for the Mobile Marketing Association.

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Monday, June 11, 2007

Changes at WordDial

It appears that some changes have been underway at WordDial, the New Zealand company that is the worldwide leading owner of numeric domain names.

Several of WordDial's top, unused domains, including 262966.com and 6984637.com, the (dot com) wordnumbers for Amazon and NY Times, respectively, are no longer parked - as they have been for years - but rather point to WordDial portals that currently are under development. Other wordnumbers, such as 2226397.com (ABC/BBC News), resolve to their own portal that simply read: 'This portal does not currently contain any information. If you would like to see information listed here then please contact us and let us know.' Other wordnumbers, such as 2378289.com (BestBuy) and 66542.com (Nokia), resolve to WordDial portals that link to sites unrelated to their word-numbers.

Other changes at WordDial: the wordnumbers for Microsoft, 642767638.com, and its Live brand, 5483.com, are once again portals. They were portals in 2006, but then parked for many months and now back to being portals.

So, what's going on at WordDial? I'd have to assume that parking numeric domains is really unprofitable for WordDial (as it probably is for everyone else!) and so forwarding domains to unrelated or undeveloped sections of their website is better than nothing. As for the portals that are allegedly under development, such as 262966.com (the dot com wordnumber for Amazon), I doubt that partnership deals were really stricken and rather these undeveloped pages are designed to illustrate - by both demonstrating mobile capability and showing the actual word translations for dot com wordnumbers (i.e., spelling out Amazon on the 262966.com page) - to prospective clients how the WordDial system could work for them.

I kind of feel bad for WordDial that its click through rates for numeric domains are so unappealing that they'd rather display a page that reads 'this portal does not currently contain any information...please contact us and let us know.'

WordDial would get better results and more partnerships by creating better demos and also advertising more widely. Why? The majority of corporate executives don't even know about the numeric domain market, let alone the wordnumber concept. The dot com wordnumbers for Google and Yahoo haven't caught on in the least. If those companies won't do the marketing, someone has got to.

In March, Yahoo signed a partnership agreement with WordDial, which has owned its wordnumber, 92466.com, for several years.

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