VIDEO: Siftables: Toy blocks that are aware of each other

February 14th, 2009

This is a video from the recent TED conference in Monterey. Siftables are these blocks with computer chips, software, a screen, and near field communications. The combination of all allows them to be aware of each other and interact learning math, playing a Scrabble-like game, and connect with a program playing on TV. My description alone can’t do it justice. Watch the video, they’re pretty darn cool.

This news item is for the Spark Minute week of 2/16/09 which can be heard daily on Green 960 and 910 KNEW in San Francisco, CA.

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Airplanes and BART are no longer an oasis for no Internet access

January 31st, 2009

I actually sometimes like to commute. It gives me a chance to unplug and do all the things I like to do when I’m not online, such as sleep, think, read, listen to podcasts, or watch movies on my iPod.

Unfortunately, the days of commuting being an oasis from connectivity are now over. More and more airlines are offering Internet access in flight and now BART has signed a 20-year deal to deliver Wi-Fi on its trains. BART expects to have all the routes and stations online by the end of 2011.

This sucks. As we become more and more connected we’re running out of excuses as to why we didn’t respond to someone’s message. The good ‘ole “I didn’t get your message” doesn’t work if you’ve got a BlackBerry or iPhone with its ubiquitous connectivity on email, Twitter, and Facebook.

Luckily technology is not perfect, and with the volume of information we’re all processing and filtering we’ve become overloaded. So no matter how ubiquitous wireless and communications technologies become, we can still rely on these two standard excuses:

Internet access wasn’t working

I’ve been so overloaded. I didn’t see your message. Sorry.

This news item is for the Spark Minute week of 2/2/09 which can be heard daily on Green 960 and 910 KNEW in San Francisco, CA.

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VIDEO: Enterprise 2.0 Conf: Schmoozing on the eve of Enterprise 2.0

June 9th, 2008

After the “Evening in the cloud” session I pulled out my Nokia N82, loaded up the Qik streaming video service, and roamed the crowd asking what they thought of the session and the Enterprise 2.0 conference which will officially launch full sessions tomorrow.

Make sure you check out the summary of all coverage from the Enterprise 2.0 Conference 2008 in Boston.
In the twenty minute video you’ll meet the following people plus a lot more whose business cards I never collected:

Make sure you check out the summary of all coverage from the Enterprise 2.0 Conference 2008 in Boston.

This post is cross-posted from the Enterprise 2.0 Blog.

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VIDEO: KQED-15th Anniversary of the Web on “This Week in Northern California”

May 3rd, 2008

Last night I appeared on KQED’s This Week in Northern California talking about the birth of the Web. Fifteen years ago Tim Berners-Lee convinced his bosses at CERN to make his design of the Web open and free to everyone. It was a critical decision as we all realize now. Billions upon billions have been made as a result of that decision. San Francisco and Silicon Valley are the hubs of innovation in the Web. What can we expect in the next 15 years? Plan on the development of the semantic Web (Web 3.0), wireless ubiquity, and mobile content following us wherever we go.

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VIDEO: Wi-Fi should be built onto every mobile device

March 20th, 2008

Ran into Matthew Snyder of ADObjects last night at a pre-party for the Under the Radar conference. We got to talking about Wi-Fi on handsets and how he thinks it’s going to be ubiquitous. I don’t think carriers are going to allow it. That was our debate.

Make sure you also catch my video with Amy Dalton of Topix. We talk about using Topix for really local news.

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Nokia gives me three seconds of fame

December 20th, 2007

A couple months ago Nokia interviewed me at the radio station (Green 960) for a promo video about the release of its Internet tablet device, the Nokia N810. After interviewing me for an hour, they pulled out a choice three seconds (:50 to :53). Doesn’t sound like a lot, but I’m actually surprised the number of my friends that contacted me saying they had seen me in the video. Don’t blink, you may miss me.



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8 Cool mobile technologies from CTIA 2007, San Francisco

October 24th, 2007

I got to spend a little time this week at the trade show floor of CTIA plus attended a few press events. Here’s a wrap up of some of the cool stuff I saw. Note, this is not exhaustive. I only got a chance to see a few items, but these are the items I thought were worth a mention.

Listen to the Spark Minute. John Scott and David Spark from Green 960 in San Francisco, CA talk about some cool mobile technology Spark saw at the CTIA conference (Run time: 6:06).


Download the MP3 (right-click, select Save Target As…)

Talkster – Free mobile-to-mobile phone calls anywhere in the world to 29 countries. All you have to do is listen to a ten second advertising message on each end and go through this funky handshaking process of the recipient receiving a pre-call and then hanging up. Then the calling party receives an SMS with a local number that you can then call and be connected to the international party. Their direct competitor is Jajah which is also very cool (See “How to make cheap to free phone calls”) but Jajah can’t connect everywhere in the world for free like Talkster claims. Talkster also has a Facebook application. I think I’m the only one who doesn’t these days.

Whrrl (from Pelago) – What happens when you mash social networking, Yelp recommendations, mapping, and location based services delivered to your mobile phone? Whrrl is trying to be Yelp, but only recommendations from your trusted sphere of friends. A compatible service to this would be Trusted Opinion (see “Web 2.0 companies from Israel“) which shows an impressive visual mind map of your friends’ recommendations.

Solio – Portable hybrid solar power charger for mobile phones and other electronic devices. They’ve got three models, and this is their newest and smallest one but doesn’t hold nearly as much juice as the other two models.

iVisionMobile – Creators of iMessenger and iPayText. iMessenger offers an extremely simply tool for launching an SMS campaign using a shared shortcode. Truly takes only a few minutes to do. Great for small phone lists like real estate brokers that want to send listings to their 20 clients. First 100 messages are free and then after that costs range from 3 to 10 cents depending on quantity. The other product allows you to sell items using the mobile phone. Mobile ticketing is not new. What’s new is how cheap this is. No hugely expensive terminal to purchase. The item they have rents for $49/month.

Mobiledata Now – Traditionally this CTIA conference has been focused on mobile entertainment. And at every show I attend they keep telling us that mobile will be coming to the enterprise. Mobile has come to the enterprise but all everyone in a corporate setting uses their smartphones for is email. There are many players trying to port over corporate databases to the mobile device. Mobiledata Now is offering a simpler solution that operates through SMS. Instead of doing a massive configuration and having to outfit everyone in the office only with Treos, BlackBerry’s or Windows Mobile Devices you can set up a query system to your backend databases via SMS on any mobile device, smart or not. For example, you could check the stock on an item from a customer site using a simple SMS query.

Edioma – English as a second language (ESL) on your mobile phone. Series of games for you to learn English. Sounds simple and it is. But the ESL market is enormous and I’m amazed nobody is trying to capitalize on it. These guys are.

LG’s Venus and Voyager – There’s already been plenty of press on these two phones. I got a chance to see them. They’re both cool. The Voyager has the internal and external screen, mobile broadcast MediaFLO technology, and full keypad inside. The Venus has a series of soft buttons on the lower half of the screen.

Bluepulse – Mobile social networking. Whoop ‘de doo you say. And generally you’d be right, but this one actually hyper-simplifies the mobile social networking concept by putting all messaging (text, pictures, videos) into a single inbox and letting you reach friends via username, email address, and phone number. The reason they’ve been able to garner 3 million users in 10 months since launch is because to actually read a message from a friend you have to register with Bluepulse. What’s also impressive is this is fully a Web mobile application. No download necessary (anymore). The company claims it hasn’t found a Web-enabled phone that it can’t work on.

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Google really knows how to mess up a wireless spectrum auction for incumbent Telcos

August 3rd, 2007

The FCC’s auction of the 700 MHz spectrum was going to go like any other. The top Telco’s and cable companies would be the only ones that could afford to participate. They’d make the bids, snatch up the available airwaves, and if they needed the space they bought, they’d use it otherwise they’d sit on it for “future development.” Good luck shareholders.

Listen to the Spark Minute (John Scott and David Spark from Green 960 in San Francisco, CA) talk about the FCC’s 700 MHz auction and Google’s desire to participate (Run time: 7:08).

Download the MP3 (right-click, select Save Target As…)

The 700 MHz auction is turning out to be a different game. The spectrum being made available for auction (what’s being vacated as TV stations move over to digital, assuming we really do achieve the cut off date in 2009 or it gets pushed back even further as it has historically) could turn out to be a great channel to deliver wireless broadband. It’s a single low power channel that can go through walls and blankets the entire country.

Watch August 3rd, 2007 appearance on KQED’s “This Week in Northern California” with Belva Davis talking about the FCC 700 MHz auction and Google’s involvement.

To ruin the Telco and cable companies’ monopolized fun, Google has decided to participate in this reindeer game. Google publicly announced they’re willing to bid up to $4.6 billion for a piece of the 700 MHz spectrum on the condition that the FCC requires all participants adhere to four points of openness. Well, the FCC agreed to device and application portability. But they’re not allowing open wholesale access to the networks for resellers, or allowing for geolocation interconnection among the networks.

This story is jam packed with arm chair quarterbacks with their theories on whats going to happen with the Telco’s dominating the wireless airwaves and what Google’s intentions are. I have to extend a huge thank you to Scott Slater of the Personal Broadband Industry Association for giving me an enormous brain dump today at the AlwaysOn Conference at Stanford. He’s got a really grand view of the future of wireless broadband Internet communications that nobody else in the media seems to see.

So here are the issues and arguments at stake:

Some are arguing that the 700 MHz spectrum may be the last chance for unfettered deregulated wireless broadband. This could be why Google has entered the race. Given America’s history of existing networks, the U.S. isn’t up to speed versus the rest of the world in broadband deployment and coverage. In fact, it ranks 17th in the world. The reason the wireless fight is so important is because access has shifted to individuals, and it’s not about connecting buildings to the last mile. Slater argues that if the 700 MHz spectrum was controlled by local TV stations, it should return to the localities and not be gobbled up to the few national incumbents.

UPDATE August 26th, 2008: Google is going to the masses now in hopes that the community of users will see the value of free airwaves rather than telephone companies bidding and holding onto spectrum.

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Microsoft’s surface computer

May 31st, 2007

Microsoft just announced this new cool coffee table computer. A multi-touch device that actually interacts with devices you put on top of it. So for example, drop a digital camera and it will take bring photos out onto the table. Want to put the photo on your mobile phone? Just drop your phone on the table and drag the image of the photo to where your mobile phone is on the table and it’s automatically uploaded. It’s pretty darn cool. Check out this video from Popular Mechanics.

Disclosure: Microsoft is a client of Spark Media Solutions.

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If nobody thinks it’s illegal then why bother arresting?

May 22nd, 2007

Driving up to a café, parking outside, downloading your email, and buzzing off is a time honored tradition of Wi-Fi leeching. We all do it, but if you’re traveling be careful of Wi-Fi drive bys in the state of Michigan where they have a “Fraudulent access to computers, computer systems, and computer networks” law in which this download-and-run scenario would be a violation.

Such was the case of a Michigan man who was arrested for using a café’s Wi-Fi from his car. What’s interesting is all the people (police officer, café owner, and Wi-Fi leecher) who witnessed this man’s daily routine didn’t think it was illegal.

So if nobody cares or nobody thinks it’s illegal then why bother? The police officer just thought it looked suspicious and thought some law might be broken. Kind of reminds me of the days Lenny Bruce would get up on stage and say dirty words. It started to raise some suspicion with people saying, “He must be doing something wrong.”

When you get right down to it, we’re probably all doing something illegal. It’s just that nobody’s got the time or patience to dig through the law books and figure out what it is.

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