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News! Or Should I Say NEWZ!

Well, in addition to landing an exciting new customer - I can't say who yet but it's a big one.  We're ready to go public on the Newz Reader and the Local Search App.  Both will be available for Windows Mobile 5.x/6.x and soon other platforms.

For now this is a free Beta so you can download and use the interface.  There's some features coming, including OPML import.  But you can use the interface to manage RSS feeds, Podcasts and Twitter with direct interaction between the web interface and the client.

We're also launching our Search app - a simple to use local search app.  Simply set your favorite searches up on the web and everytime you sync the client you are given the 4 or 8 closest hits to your location.

We're working on the iPhone, Android and Widget releases right now.

ViaNewz

ViaSearchz

Please give 'em a whirl.

We have an Appz for that...

It's been an interesting weekend as we fiddled with the Mix10 Appz and had a think about what it is we had done with it.  We've had some positive feedback from a couple of trial users who liked the general approach and were extremely impressed with the speed at which we'd put the complete application together.

The question they asked, and I suppose one we need to think about is what we do with that? 

Our business goals are clear, we still intend to license the technology to third parties and provide hosted solutions for some of our services.  However, the tactical appz like the MWC App and the Mix App have given us a boost in the web traffic, if nothing else.  To whit, as of this morning the Viafo website has had as much traffic as our previous record breaking month...

With this in mind I think we'll do a CTIA app - it's in keeping with ViaEventz anyway.  But what else should we do?  The World Cup (Soccer, you know the one that practically everybody in the world plays) is coming up in June - should we build an app for that and have it on our main platforms, which should, by then, include WinMo, Bada, iPhone and Android?  Or does that become a low revenue time sink for us?

To be honest, I don't know at the moment.  I'll let you know when we make the decision.

 

Mix10 Appz: Day 4 - Beta/Alpha Delivery

I'll be the first to admit that this isn't 100% perfect.  Give us a break, we have only had a few days.  But here's the Mix10 app for Windows Mobile built on Viafo's technology after we decided to do this on Tuesday.

Key features and stuff we did get done:

 

  • Windows Mobile 5.x, 6.x Touch and Non-Touch Support
  • Integrated with the speaker profiles and schedule
  • Maps coming over the weekend
  • Integrates to your Twitter Account and provides a #mix10 Twitter feed
  • Integrated Mix10 RSS feeds plus slots for 5 of your own relevant RSS feeds
  • Follow Users for the Twitter #mix10 feed feature and Follow Speakers - where they've registered a twitter handle
  • We might add local search for Las Vegas too... but that's the point at which the CTO starts kicking me...

 

There are a couple of things we've spotted which are Windows Mobile related.  If the device is low on system memory we've seen the initial, "large" sync failing - there's not a lot we can do about WinMo memory management but if you do get a "ViaStkz failed error" then try a reboot to clear the memory out and retry.  And whinge at somebody from WinMo when you see them at Mix ;)

Feedback will be useful, but remember this was a Quick and Dirty attempt to build a working and useful app from a set of backend data sources in a couple of days.  I hope you enjoy it!

Mix10 Appz: Day 2

Quick update on the Mix10 App we're building.  We've got the features agreed and we've pretty much sourced all the content to add.  The goal of our solution is to make building mobile applications like this, especially those for events, really easy.

The tricky part, at least for us, is all on the back end of the app.  So we've been locked down over the course of the day working out how we can extract the schedule and attendee data from the online side of things.  We've got that sorted today, so we should have the application built for tomorrow... and, I'll be honest, if we can show 48 hours from thinking about the mobile app, to the app being ready for download, complete with the web interface built... well... then I'll be a happy CEO.

I'll check in tomorrow to see if we've got everything done and a link to the app...  Shame we're not even going - but we have to pick our events carefully at the moment and we're already off to Vegas later in the month.

Maybe next year... especially if somebody at Microsoft pays.

The Bravado of the Start Up CEO

Coming from a BizDev background with just enough technical understanding to be dangerous gives me the fun without the object horror associated with having to do things...  at least until I have to micro-manage the deadline :)

Actually, I'm kidding a little.  But it does mean I get to have insane ideas and then act on them while dumping most of the hard work onto other people, and today I've had a good one.  It comes from a post from a friend who is one of the world's few remaining Windows Mobile users who notes that the apps for Mix seem to be iPhone focused.  Highly amusing when you read that one of the big things for Mix will be a phone to beat the iPhone.

Anyway, this got me thinking about a challenge for us.  There is a Mix App out there for the event on iPhone - why don't we see if we can put something our using our technology which matches some of the iPhone App functionality using our ViaEventz stuff and see if we can get it out there before the event and with some interactive and dazzling functionality...

I've not spoken to the CTO yet, but I know he loves a challenge...

I'll get back to you later...

To Patent or Not To Patent That Is the Question

A few months ago we took the decision not to patent one of the features of our technology.  We were concerned about the cost of doing so and the nature of software patents in general.  We haven't launched that particular feature set yet so the window isn't, in theory, closed.

Over the last few weeks we've had cause to reconsider this due to the current crop of Patent insanity, which has led me to start thinking along, if you can't beat 'em, join them 'em lines.

I am extremely concerned about what I'm seeing in terms of what is being granted as patents at the moment because I think it's calling into question what a software patent is and actually should be.   There's two areas here.  There's the stuff that Apple and Nokia are fighting over, which involves quite a lot of hard arsed technical radio and phone stuff that, frankly, Apple are screwed over.  If Qualcomm, a company whose legal department is actually a profitable P&L, couldn't beat Nokia at this game, I suspect that Apple might find themselves feeling like Imperial Japan post-Pearl Harbour.

The second area is Apple's next counter punch which is the bucket of infringements they've slapped HTC with.  This is the area, along with Facebook's "news feed" patent that leave me feeling that things have got silly.  

Firstly, let me caveat the rest of this comment with the issue that I'm not a lawyer and nor do I play one on TV.  This is just my opinion based on the last decade spent in the mobile industry and dealing directly with IP related issues with some of the players.  

A lot of the items that Apple has hit HTC with are actually features of software that HTC have licensed.  I'm not sure about Google's license, I've not read it closely enough.  However, I have read the WinMo license and there's a fair degree of protection against patent infringement in there.  Apple must be aware of this so HTC is a proxy in a war with MS and Google.  While most companies might find this uncomfortable, especially small ones, I think Apple is underestimating HTC.  They're a self made Taiwanese OEM - the first of the ODMs to really make a transition to OEMhood.  They're also from a nation that's spent 60 years facing off against a nuclear capable superpower.  HTC are a not exactly a push over to deal with - believe me, you should try selling to them.

So, have HTC infringed anything by using software that's been licensed to them?  And do UI features or presentation issues (like slide/gesture to unlock) represent an actual invention?

Which brings me back to the News Feed and a patent that scares the hell out of me - is this actually something you can defend?

Anyway - I've slowly been coming around to deciding that yes, we probably should patent the next feature we've been working on because we actually think it's novel and new.  Of course, should Apple/Nokia/MS/Qualcomm/Facebook or WHOEVER decide that its something they already did or want to do, we're probably screwed anyway...

And that kind of impact on business and innovation is exactly what I thought patents were invented to prevent.

Off to Barcelona we go...

One of the funniest sitcoms in history, at least in my opinion, was the incredibly short lived but hysterically funny Fawlty Towers.  A tour-de-force by John Cleese as a minor hotel owner in a seaside town in the South West of England.  If you haven't seen it, stop reading and go and find it.

One of the minor characters is Manuel, an unfortunate soul working for Cleese's horrendous Basil Fawlty.  Nothing Manuel does is right even when Basil is at fault, and every infraction is blamed simply on the fact that Manuel is from Barcelona.

Well, in a few days pretty much every body in the mobile industry will be in Barcelona too.  It's the annual GSM Association conference there.  This will be my 10th year and the second time I'm going as part of a new company, and the first time as CEO.  It's an amazing event - 50,000+ people crowded into the old Olympic center displaying and selling the leading in mobile technologies.  We'll be there, exhibiting at the Alcatel Lucent stand in Hall 7.  I'll post more on that tomorrow.

Here I wanted to focus on what I'm expecting to see or hoping to...

  • Windows Phone 7 - having developed our V1 solution on Windows Mobile, I feel that, out of loyalty I should be excited about that.  But I feel like I've been invited to the ball once too often by MS and they've never actually taken me.  Everybody I know at Microsoft tells me how wonderful it is, but I still haven't seen evidence of this.  I'm still not convinced we'll see anything other than canned demos even now
  • Apps!  Lots and lots of apps.  I'm on record as not being persuaded by the concept of Browser based services for mobile phones and I think Apple has, in a way, locked the mindshare of the phone using community into the app in the way that SMS has for messaging.  Let's be honest here.  Nobody in their right mind would send 140 character messages at $0.25 a message, but we all do, even though we have email.  Why?  Because it works.  I think Apps will be the same
  • Location and Augmented Reality - I'm hoping to see a lot of this.  Why?  Because it's cool

I intend to blog through the event, WiFi permitting!

New Features Coming

We've been rushing to add new backend features into the web-app, and also into the client.  The next version will be able to handle Podcast RSS with the options of delivering the podcast to your PC to save or listen to or download them to a WinMo device via the browser.

Fingers crossed with a following wind we'll be releasing the fully public client soon.

We're also making great strides with the enterprise version ready for our first customer launches.