Saturday, February 12, 2011

Apanda A100 4.3 inches Android Handset coming soon

apanda-a100

In China’s Shanzhai Android phone market, Apanda definitely is not a strange name. We’ve heard it since it launched its first Android phone A60 back in December 2009, a time when almost every single Android handset receiving huge attention from the world on its arrival. Now after more than one and a half years, The company is about to launch its more solid product A100, which also runs Android OS.

Apanda A100 is packing a 1Ghz Qualcomm Snapdragon QSD8650 chip, a 4.3 inches 480×800 capacitive touchscreen, 2GB ROM, 512MB RAM, a 5-megapixel camera, 3.5mm headphone jack, and a 1400 mAh battery. The prototype now runs Android 2.2, and according to the company the product version will run Android 2.3. It’s said the phone even supports 720p videos. Unfortunately we heard no words about the price and time of availability. Hope it won’t get you Apanda fans wait too long. Judging from the specs you won’t hope for a price that’s about $150 USD, will you?

[Source:cnmo]


Link to full article

Evolution of Web: From ICE to ICE TEA!

In the first decade of web (1990-2000) an acronym was extensively used – “ICE”, it stands for Information, Communication and Entertainment primarily to refer to the various uses of the web. Websites used to provide information that search engines used to help in finding, tools like email and instant messengers were used for communication and there were plethora of sites that used to provide entertainment content (esp. porn and jokes). It was basically a read only web driven by text and image based content powered by a dial up internet.

In the second decade (2000 – 2010) the web took a major leap in terms of the uses it can be put to and the only major difference in terms of technology capability was that it became writable and got powered by broadband internet. Ecommerce and Web 2.0 revolutionized the web and many more applications of web emerged. The web evolved from ICE to ICE TEA, in terms of the value it gives us and uses it can be put to at a basic level!

ice

Information

We now not just read information but can also produce/publish it, netizens who were primarily consumers became prosumers (producers + consumers). The format of information evolved from just text and image to also include audio, video and animation. Today video is the fastest growing format and overall codified information doubles every 11 hours.

Communication

We evolved from just email and instant messages to phone calls, web conferencing, tweets, and status updates. Communication today has evolved and became Collaboration that can be enabled at a large level spread across continents. The challenge now is to tap into the huge cognitive surplus (as Clay Shirky puts it) that the collaborative web (Web 2.0) unleashed to us and to use it for purposes beyond just entertainment.connected_world

Entertainment

From image and text based entertainment web evolved to provide 3D virtual worlds, advance gaming and video based entertainment. It still is the biggest driver of web traffic and revenue. Challenge is to motivate netizens/prosumers to apply their cognitive surplus and web time for causes like digital activism and social good.

Transactions

Beyond ICE we started to use Web for transacting by using virtual money through credit/debit cards and net banking. Ecommerce today is a norm and still one of the fastest growing markets. We comfortably transact on web to buy products and services and do banking and other non-monetary transactions like legal and contractual.

Earning

The new participative and prosumers driven web is the place where anyone can earn from it by making their services (time, skills and produce) like coding, images/photos, tuitions etc available through various platforms, by developing applications and providing them as SaaS. This earning potential will increase with time and will become more wide spread. The percentage share offered by platforms to providers/co-creators will also increase with increased competition and reducing cost of technology.

Advertising Self

One of the most important changes that have happened with a participative web is that now people can establish online reputation by participating and collaborating online and this reputation is increasingly tracked and used to evaluate people and organizations.

So what do you think the Web will evolve to in the next decade (2010-20)? Where will it go from being ICE TEA? What can be the new uses at a generic level? Will everything move positively ahead or there could be backlashes or undoing also?

Do share your thoughts and ideas in comments.

[Guest article by Sumeet Anand is Founder & CEO of Kreeo (i-nable Solutions), a startup in the space of Enterprise 2.0 and collective intelligence. img credit]


Link to full article

Nokia Microsoft Deal And Impact On the Smartphone Ecosystem [Analysis]

Nokia has Elop(ed) with Microsoft and here are the sound reasons (as stated by the two companies)

- Microsoft is not a handset manufacturer. Nokia is. Windows Phone 7, though a great OS needs a much more dedicated focus from a handset manufacturer (distribution network, supply chain etc etc).

- Nokia needs an entry in North American market. Every other attempt has failed. Most importantly, Nokia has miserably failed in smartphone OS market and needs a ready-made OS that is of same league as iOS/Android.

Together they can beat Apple, Google (The Third Ecosystem)..blah blah.

Now, lets look at who gets what

- Nokia: Back to revenue numbers (over the next few years). No more fighting the lost Smartphone OS battle. What happens in the long run? Chances of become irrelevant, and loss of mind share (are they the Yahoo of mobile world?).

- Microsoft: Winner takes it all. Steve Ballmer has been aggressive with Bing and now, the WP7. The good news is that WP7 is a pretty awesome OS, just that MS needs a lot more developer love and a handset manufacturer company to help them improve the offering. They stand tall in this deal, though it’d be interesting when the first ‘Nokia+WP7’ device comes out (and how much of impact Nokia makes to WP7 user experience).

Question to ponder – Can Nokia maintain its brand identity post this deal (its not M&A, but such deals usually erode the brand value among early adopters/influencer community)? Most importantly, will developers flock to Nokia developer ecosystem (“Developers, Developers, Developers”) or move to Android?

- Blackberry/RIM : Isn’t it time for them to fish for a new daddy? Is HP listening? There is no fourth ecosystem, right?

- Android. What happens to manufacturers like Samsung/HTC, who are also manufacturing WP7 phones (Samsung earlier announced that they will focus more on WP7 than Android) ? Will they play second fiddle to Nokia (which as the annoncement states that they will work closely with MS on design/UX etc)? If Samsung/HTC go aggressive on Android, they need to differentiate more – will that lead to fragmentation?

- nokia-micro-chart-520

Our Take

This is NOT a handset manufacturing + software game any more. This is now about creating powerful offering around some of those points we talked about recently [read: Mobile Trends 2011–Apps Are The New Web, Communities The New Currency].

  • The DELL – ification of Phones – MS+Nokia has the weight behind it to throw into many phone SKUs at the same time. While Android is looking at the DELL model, MS+Nokia would try to reinvent the story they did with computers with HP etc. As far as the balance goes, this is even. However relatively closed systems like iPhone would get to bear some heat once the biggies enter with their deep pockets
  • Apps are the new web – Microsoft has still not recognized this and to their disadvantage. However this is a step in the right direction. With their combined might and providing an easier development platform (no one knows this better than MS – that’s how they won the PC battle) – they can kick some serious ass. However Google has led the way here and wouldn’t be caught sleeping. Apple again is the clear winner till now – and started the trend in the first place. How they maintain their supremacy is what is going to be the game changer.
  • Communities – the new currency – Nokia always has had a vibrant community. We are not sure how that will shape up after this. Microsoft typically bisects opinions like no one else. Android has the best communities and would surely leverage it. As for communities on FB/ other platforms, Nokia will surely try to leverage the relationship MS has.
  • Software – the new era for telecoms – The game is tied here. Consolidation will however allow all of them to pull their weight with telecoms who have been the most important albatrosses around smartphone necks. Good days ahead for consumers as they  squeeze more out of the telecoms.
  • Open + closed – We are not sure how that would pan out. The jury is still out – and the winners would be the ones leveraging the “+” in open + closed. As of now, Android seems to be the most open and iPhone the most closed – we would however think Android has an edge in managing the ecosystem better and making the best of the opportunity.
  • Experience ecosystems – Again Apple has led the way here. Microsoft has one part of this solved (in terms of computers). However in the past they have always thought incremental – building on top of existing products which themselves were built on tattered remnants of earlier ones. And they have come up with amazingly crappy products like Windows Mobile Sync etc. (for 6.5 and above). This is a great opportunity to rethink a few of these interfaces (including leveraging the cloud better – and Google is kickass in that). As of now Apple wins hands down here though.
  • Developers – Developers – For those of you who haven’t heard Steve Ballmer burst an artery singing the sing for Developers (video embedded below). Microsoft believes strongly in developers and engineering – not only inside but also to grow as a platform. They will, we are sure come up with a compelling platform for developers to develop on as well as a huge range of phones on it. The future is going to be easy and exciting for developers.

What’s your opinion on Nok + MSFT deal? How does this impact the ecosystem?
Video: The Famous Developers, Developers, Developers



[Written by Pratyush and Ashish]


Link to full article

9th Python User Group Meeting – 17 Feb

This next Python User Group meetup will see three speakers speaking on three different topics.

Agenda

Talk : Using Python and Screen-Scraping To Grab Data From An Online Learning System
Speaker : Thomas O’Dell

Thomas will share his experiences of using Python to supplement an online learning system for work that he does with grading and evaluating students

Talk : What’s Coming Up in Python 3.2
Speaker : Senthil Kumaran

Senthil has moved to Singapore recently and he is an active contributor to the international Python community, having spoken at PyCon APAC 2010.

Talk : TBA
Guest Speaker : Graham Dumpleton

Graham is probably best known as the author of the mod_wsgi module for Apache for hosting of Python web applications via the WSGI interface. He is also a member of the Python Software Foundation and Apache Software Foundation.


Event Details

When: Thursday 17th February 2011
Time: 730pm-1030pm
Where: School of Information Systems – Seminar Room 2.2, Singapore Management University


Link to full article

Nokia Elop(es) with Microsoft [Will Adopt WP7, Symbian Becomes Franchise Platform]

Alright. Nokia has Elop(ed) with Microsoft and the two companies have announced a strategic partnership.

  • Nokia will adopt Windows Phone as its primary smartphone strategy, innovating on top of the platform in areas such as imaging, where Nokia is a market leader.nokia_wp7
  • Nokia will help drive and define the future of Windows Phone. Nokia will contribute its expertise on hardware design, language support, and help bring Windows Phone to a larger range of price points, market segments and geographies.
  • Bing will power Nokia’s search services across Nokia devices and services, giving customers access to Bing’s next generation search capabilities (Qn: What happens to Nokia/Yahoo partnership for default search and email provider? Oh well, even Yahoo is powered by Bing !).
  • Microsoft development tools will be used to create applications to run on Nokia Windows Phones,
  • Nokia’s content and application store will be integrated with Microsoft Marketplace for a more compelling consumer experience.
  • Nokia Maps will be a core part of Microsoft’s mapping services. For example, Maps would be integrated with Microsoft’s Bing search engine and adCenter advertising platform to form a unique local search and advertising experience.
  • MeeGo will place increased emphasis on longer-term market exploration of next-generation devices, platforms and user experiences”. [rest here]
  • Symbian becomes a franchise platform.

To get Nokia to switch, Google and Microsoft are offering hundreds of millions of dollars worth of engineering assistance and marketing support, according to a person who has done consulting for the company and was told of the talks. [NYT]

Here is where Nokia has hurt itself in a super big way

- Lost love/trust from developer community. Who will trust Nokia anymore? Given the love for open source (Symbian), will developers stick to Android? Or more monetizable iOS?

- Short term vs. Long term? Well, my respect for Steve Ballmer almost tripled (not tripped) after this move. He now will have access to a large distribution network, a mega brand and given the beauty of WP7 (yeah!), Microsoft does come out as #3 in this space.

What about Nokia? I guess they are the new Yahoo. They had the opportunity, lost out and took the easy way out.

As far as Stephen Elop is concerned, he must have had a time of his life being on the other side of the table and negotiating with ex-boss!. Watch this announcement video:

Nokia Fanboys – are you giving up on Symbian (and eventually Nokia phones)? Is N-story over? Who benefits? Android?

We earlier wrote this: 10 Things Nokia Should Do in India (and Emerging Markets). We sincerely wish Nokia had launched a separate Smartphone brand..

—Full Press Release–

Nokia outlines new strategy, introduces new leadership, operational structure

London, UK – Nokia today outlined its new strategic direction, including changes in leadership and operational structure to accelerate the company’s speed of execution in a dynamic competitive environment.

Major elements of the new strategy include:

- Plans for a broad strategic partnership with Microsoft to build a new global mobile ecosystem; Windows Phone would serve as Nokia’s primary smartphone platform.
- A renewed approach to capture volume and value growth to connect “the next billion” to the Internet in developing growth markets
- Focused investments in next-generation disruptive technologies
- A new leadership team and organizational structure with a clear focus on speed, results and accountability

“Nokia is at a critical juncture, where significant change is necessary and inevitable in our journey forward,” said Stephen Elop, Nokia President and CEO. “Today, we are accelerating that change through a new path, aimed at regaining our smartphone leadership, reinforcing our mobile device platform and realizing our investments in the future.”

Nokia plans to form a strategic partnership with Microsoft to build a global mobile ecosystem based on highly complementary assets. The Nokia-Microsoft ecosystem targets to deliver differentiated and innovative products and have unrivalled scale, product breadth, geographical reach, and brand identity. With Windows Phone as its primary smartphone platform, Nokia would help drive the future of the platform by leveraging its expertise on hardware optimization, software customization, language support and scale. Nokia and Microsoft would also combine services assets to drive innovation. Nokia Maps, for example, would be at the heart of key Microsoft assets like Bing and AdCenter, and Nokia’s application and content store would be integrated into Microsoft Marketplace. Under the proposed partnership, Microsoft would provide developer tools, making it easier for application developers to leverage Nokia’s global scale.

With Nokia’s planned move to Windows Phone as its primary smartphone platform, Symbian becomes a franchise platform, leveraging previous investments to harvest additional value. This strategy recognizes the opportunity to retain and transition the installed base of 200 million Symbian owners. Nokia expects to sell approximately 150 million more Symbian devices in the years to come.

Under the new strategy, MeeGo becomes an open-source, mobile operating system project. MeeGo will place increased emphasis on longer-term market exploration of next-generation devices, platforms and user experiences. Nokia still plans to ship a MeeGo-related product later this year.

In feature phones, Nokia unveiled a renewed strategy to leverage its innovation and strength in growth markets to connect the next billion people to their first Internet and application experience.

New leadership team, operational structure
This new strategy is supported by significant changes in Nokia’s leadership, operational structure and approach. Effective today, Nokia has a new leadership team with the commitment, competencies and innovative thinking needed in today’s dynamic environment.

The Nokia Leadership Team, previously the Group Executive Board, will consist of the following members: Stephen Elop, Esko Aho, Juha Akras, Jerri DeVard, Colin Giles, Rich Green, Jo Harlow, Timo Ihamuotila, Mary McDowell, Kai Oistamo, Tero Ojanpera, Louise Pentland and Niklas Savander.

Alberto Torres has stepped down from the management team, effective February 10 to pursue other interests outside the company.

The renewed governance will expedite decision-making and improve time-to-market of products and innovations, placing a heavy focus on results, speed and accountability. The new strategy and operational structure are expected to have significant impact to Nokia operations and personnel.

New company structure
As of April 1, Nokia will have a new company structure, which features two distinct business units: Smart Devices and Mobile Phones. They will focus on Nokia’s key business areas: high-end smartphones and mass-market mobile phones. Each unit will have profit-and-loss responsibility and end-to-end accountability for the full consumer experience, including product development, product management and product marketing.

Smart Devices will be responsible for building Nokia’s leadership in smartphones and will be led by Jo Harlow. The following sub-units now in Mobile Solutions will move under Smart Devices:
- Symbian Smartphones
- MeeGo Computers
- Strategic Business Operations

To support the planned new partnership with Microsoft, Smart Devices will be responsible for creating a winning Windows Phone portfolio.

Mobile Phones will drive Nokia’s “web for the next billion” strategy. Mobile Phones will leverage its innovation and strength in growth markets to connect the next billion people and bring them affordable access to the Internet and applications. The Mobile Phones unit will be led by Mary McDowell.

Markets will be responsible for selling products, executing compelling marketing and communications, creating a competitive local ecosystem, sourcing, customer care, manufacturing, IT and logistics across all Nokia products. It will be headed by Niklas Savander.

Services and Developer Experience will be responsible for Nokia’s global services portfolio, developer offering, developer relations and integration of partner service offerings. Tero Ojanpera will lead the Services and Developer Experience unit in an acting capacity.

NAVTEQ, an integral part of Nokia’s location and advertising business, will be headed by Larry Kaplan, and continue as a separate reporting entity.

The CTO Office will be responsible for Nokia’s technology strategy and forward-looking technology activities, including Nokia Research Center. It will be headed by Rich Green.

Design, responsible for Nokia product and user experience design, will be led by Marko Ahtisaari.

The CFO Office, responsible for all financial activity, will be headed by Timo Ihamuotila.

Corporate Development, responsible for driving implementation of Nokia’s ecosystem strategy and strategic partnerships, will be headed by Kai Oistamo.

Corporate Relations & Responsibility, responsible for Nokia’s government and public affairs, sustainable development and social responsibility, will be led by Esko Aho.

Human Resources will be led by Juha Akras.

Legal and Intellectual Property will be led by Louise Pentland.

Nokia Siemens Networks continues in the Nokia Group as a separate reporting entity.


Link to full article

Events For The Week – 12-19 Feb

Latest Entrepreneurial Events in SingaporeFor a one-stop to all events related to or concerning entrepreneurship, certain industry-meets-business forums and seminars in Singapore, check out our Calendar. If not, you can also follow our bite-size updated posts for upcoming events for the week.

Events range from simple get-togethers to full-blown conferences. Get to meet fellow developers, entrepreneurs, startup CEOs & founders, and meet & learn from CEOs of established companies who have seen it all.

Our aim here at SGE is to make it easy for you to pick & choose from the event buffet. Enjoy.

Here are the events for this week. Events are mostly in Singapore (generally 30 minutes drive from anywhere), but we also include key events from around Southeast Asia and beyond.


Wed 16th Feb:

(1) Web Wednesday – Social Media Monitoring


Thurs 17th Feb:

(1) AWS 101 Seminar: Making the Case for Cloud

(2) 9th Python User Group Meeting


If you’re looking for a real-time Q&A solution for your event, check out PigeonHole Live. The team at PigeonHole has kindly agreed to allow event organisers who quote SGEntrepreneurs to get to use their solution for free till end June 2011.


Image courtesy of joyosity.


Link to full article

How Helpful Are Your Error Messages [DNA of Great Products]

First things first – Do you really need error messages to be helpful? Do you really need error messages that have a ‘call to action’ attached vs. ones that are pure generic in nature?

Before you answer, take a look at error messages browsers show when there is no Internet connectivity (all I did was that I launched the browser with no Internet connectivity).

Firefox Error Message

firefox_error

As generic as it could get.  Lists out all possible options.

Helpful? 1/5.

IE Error Message

Internet Explorer does Firefox ++, i.e. lists down all possible options and also suggests what else can I do, now that I am offline – i.e. a good way to surface few features.IE_error

Helpful? 1.5/5.

Chrome Error Message

google_error

Chrome clearly tells you that you are not connected to Internet’ and suggests steps you should take to fix the problem.

Helpful? 4.5/5 [providing a shortcut to Internet connection closes the loop).

-

So why is it that developers do not throw exact error message? Well, because it means iterating into deeper logic layers/‘else’ statements and that translates to higher utilization of processing resource (and time).

Fair point.

But if you OWN the product (as an entrepreneur, product manager) and bet your life on it, would you not throw helpful error message and earn some product love (look, Chrome got some love and adds to perception)?

The question to answer here is “Why Stay Mediocre?”. (just because everybody else is?).

Opinion? Do you think such decisions are a function of organization/product DNA?

* Opera, thanks to caching showed the last opened webpage, i.e. no clue of your offline status, until you click a link. Helpful? We leave that for Opera to answer.

Recommended Read: Running a Startup is Sexy, Building Business is Boring. You Decide


Link to full article

Mobile Trends 2011–Apps Are The New Web, Communities The New Currency

2011 is a watershed year with a lot of realignments in the industry coming up [example: Nokia's Windows Mobile love].
Yesterday we came across this very interesting and thought provoking slide deck by VisionMobile which mentioned a few megatrends in the very fluid mobile space. Some of the pointers to the new wave of mobile changes coming up -

  • HP releases a few phones with WebOS
  • Microsoft and Nokia phone rumors
  • Android overtaking anything else in the smartphone segment
  • Smartphones growing by 70% and Nokia losing market share by 7% (overall)
  • Steve Jobs taking a medical break

The authors of this deck have made a good job of distilling some of the observed trends and identified the 8 major trends below

  • The DELL-ification of mobile phones
  • Apps are the new web
  • Communities: the new currency
  • Software: new era for telecoms
  • Open + closed
  • Stuck in the telecoms age
  • Experience ecosystems
  • Developers, developers

The analysis is thoughtful and very thought provoking. The content is large enough not to fit into one blog post here – so we will let you go through the deck below.

Do let us know your thoughts – are these an indicator of the times ahead or do you think this exercise is too academic and innovators will continue to disrupt?


Link to full article