Microsoft Recite for Mobile Remembers

February 15th, 2009 by seattle24x7

Microsoft has released a “Technology Preview” of its new Microsoft Recite application, which will officially be unveiled at the Mobile World Congress (MWC) in Barcelona this week.

Recite is an application for Windows Mobile that uses voice search technology to let users record notes for themselves and then later find those notes by speaking back to the application. Here’s an example. You could first tell Microsoft Recite: “Emil’s birthday is February 23″ as well as “Emil wants a 16GB Zune for his birthday.” When you later want to figure out what to get me for my birthday and when it is, you can simply say “Emil’s birthday” into the search function. Saying “Zune” would also bring up the second message, as well as any other entries that also mention “Zune.”

Google and Clearwire: Something Else in the Air

January 17th, 2008 by seattle24x7

Hometown-based broadband service provider Clearwire is teaming up with Google to provide popular Google Apps communication to Clearwire customers. In the first half of the year, Clearwire customers will be migrated into Gmail and Google Calendar as well as access to Gtalk.Scott Richardson, Clearwire’s chief strategy officer said that the agreement would further the company’s commitment to deliver useful internet services to its customers. “Both companies are built on the foundation of providing a simple to use, rich and open internet experience and we believe the addition of these communications tools will be a tremendous benefit to Clearwire’s customers,” said Richardson.

Dave Girouard, VP and GM of Google Enterprise said that they are pleased to offer Google’s search and communication tools to Clearwire’s customers. “Our companies share a vision of giving consumers innovative choices that will the change the way they interact with each other,” said Girouard.

Whrrl Plots Your Every Move — Via Cell Phone

December 2nd, 2007 by seattle24x7

Whrrl is a new service that allows mobile phone users to chronicle every social activity in their lives — writing reviews of movies or restaurants or uploading photos from concerts and sporting events. It then plots that information on a map and combines it with similar content from friends, creating a personal mobile city guide. It also provides the real-time locations of people as they wander from place to place in a city, tracking chosen friends as dots on a map.

Whrrl — not to be confused with a competing service called Whirrl — is the first offering from Pelago, a Seattle startup that scored $7.4 million from Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers, Amazon.com founder Jeff Bezos and Trilogy Equity Partners last year.

Led by Jeff Holden and Darren Erik Vengroff, both of whom previously held high-ranking positions at Amazon.com, Pelago is one of a number of companies trying to tap the emerging arena of location-based services. The idea is that mobile phone users will want to locate friends — who may be at a nearby restaurant — or at the very least get a review of the restaurant that a friend wrote a few weeks ago. The service is also accessible on a PC.

Google also is moving into the arena with the purchase of Jaiku, a company that allows mobile-phone users to create a running Web log of events, recommendations and other information. Jaiku describes its mobile product as “a live phone book that displays the activity streams, availability, and location of your Jaiku contacts right in your phone contact list.” Twitter, which also allows people to share small tidbits of information with friends, also is a potential threat.

Whrrl is not available to all mobile phone users. Only subscribers to AT&T, Sprint and T-Mobile — on about eight to 10 phone models — can download Whrrl. A portion of the service is free, though Pelago plans to charge less than $3 a month for the location-based service. Pelago, which plans to pursue more funding early next year, employs 34 people.

<http://www.whrrl.com/

Medio Launches Mobile Ad Network

March 21st, 2007 by seattle24x7

Medio Systems, the Seattle-based company that provides search technology to wireless operators, has launched a Google-like pay per click advertising product with several top carriers, including the youth-focused Amp’d Mobile wireless service.

The new Medio Mobile Now Ad Network will offer advertisers the ability to purchase text ads that run in conjunction with mobile search results, much in the same way that paid search ads run on search results pages on Google and Yahoo. Like such ads, Medio’s mobile search ads are sold using a Web-based auction, and advertisers pay for ads only when users click on them. In addition, Medio says that its proprietary technology incorporates data from users’ mobile Web surfing habits, making its ads more relevant that straight paid search ads.

According to Omar Tawakol, chief advertising officer for Medio Systems, the new network will initially be focused on direct response mobile advertisers. “Mobile search is a unique advertising platform where advertisers can reach consumers who are actively looking for their services and ready to transact at that moment,” he said. “By providing consumers a click-saving experience that returns actionable answers matched with highly relevant ad messages, the Medio MobileNow Ad Network can drive a much higher ROI for advertisers.”

In addition to the new ad product, Medio has announced a deal with pay-per-call advertising vendor Ingenio to feature its ad listings within Medio search results. As a result of this partnership, local advertisers, which may not have robust mobile Web capabilities, will be able to instruct users to call them directly by clicking on a mobile search ad.

InfoSpace moves Fast to Develop Mobile Search

February 13th, 2007 by seattle24x7

Bellevue-based InfoSpace Inc. is vying to become the Google or Yahoo of mobile-search technology by becoming fast friends with Fast, of Oslo, Norway.

The new relationship will put the companies to work jointly developing search technology for use by cellular providers according to Brendan Benzing, InfoSpace’s vice president of mobile search. Such joint technology would be sold directly to cellular providers for use by customers, who won’t see either company’s name on their screens, Benzing said.Only about 10 percent of U.S. cell phone owners are using the Web browsers built into their handsets, according to JupiterResearch. And of those, “very few people are doing search on their phones,” Benzing acknowledged. The partnership will have a “very, very small impact” on InfoSpace’s revenue this year and next, he said.

Deutsche Telekom, France Telecom, Hutchison Whampoa, Telecom Italia, Telfonica and Vodafone, as well as American provider Cingular, may develop their own search or announce a deal with an existing search provider, said Tim Bajarin, president of research firm Creative Strategies Inc.

Local Search Platform in T-Mobile

January 9th, 2007 by seattle24x7

Seattle’s Medio Systems has announced it will provide T-Mobile USA’s search platform for mobile phones. The search capability will be used on the phone’s storefront, also called a deck. It will allow users to search for ringtones, wallpaper and other content. It will also be used for some local listings found in the White Pages and sports scores.

Medio recently secured $30 million in venture capital and is winning deals at major carriers including Verizon Wireless and Telus.

The latest success appears to supplant InfoSpace, which previously handled the search engine for T-Mobile, and is just across the pond in Bellevue.

On Friday, T-Mobile, also in Bellevue, said InfoSpace continues to be a partner.

NootMobile™ Launches Support of MSN™ Messenger For Mobile Instant Messaging

October 16th, 2006 by seattle24x7

Knewtrino Inc., parent company of NootMobile™ and a leading innovator of mobile instant messaging and information delivery services, has announced support of MSN™ Messenger for NootMobile™ Beta, the mobile instant messaging service for next generation smartphones and mobile devices.

NootMobile™ is a mobile instant messaging service that provides mobile access to the most popular instant messaging communities including AOL(TM) Messenger, Yahoo!(TM) Messenger, MSN(TM) Messenger and in the following weeks other popular messaging networks. Unlike other mobile instant messaging services, the NootMobile™ Beta instant messaging service is accessed through a mobile web browser and requires no software download. Read the rest of this entry »

Golly gee, T-Mobile 3G!

October 6th, 2006 by seattle24x7

T-Mobile USA, the fourth largest U.S. carrier, is expected to announce that it will begin to roll out 3G services, which provides high-speed wireless broadband data to phones and laptops. T-Mobile is the last of the nationwide carriers to begin the network upgrade because it did not have sufficient airwaves to do so until now.