Friday, February 03, 2006

Send SMS From Google

Google is now offering text messaging to any US mobile phone. All you have to do is enter the phone number, select the carrier and send your message.
When Google announced the Google Toolbar version 4 earlier this week, one of the new features was a Send To button that allowed quick text messaging (among other things). However, you don’t need the toolbar to use the service.
Then again, you could also just set up a few contacts for sending SMS through your email.

Wednesday, February 01, 2006

Voice SMS Technology

BubbleTalk™ – the first voice sms technology in the world – is now available to CSL’s customers. BubbleTalk™ enables customers to record what they want to express in their own voice directly via BubbleTalk™ messaging platform. A short message, either in Chinese or English characters, will be sent to customers alerting them to a personally recorded voice message. Bubble Motion is a Singapore-based company that launched the world’s first Voice SMS technology “BubbleTalk™ in Jan 2005. Since then, it has penetrated Malaysia, Singapore and Indonesia with Hong Kong being its latest addition. Bubble Motion provides a sophisticated next generation carrier class platform that offers high reliability and scalability to CSL.“Bubble Motion is extremely pleased about our partnership with CSL as we are reaching a whole new audience in this challenging market. It is also our first step into Hong Kong and hopefully Greater China,” Founder and Director of Bubble Motion Sunil Coushik said.

Tuesday, January 31, 2006

Mobile Advertising to the Masses

Third Screen Media has just released a mobile advertising platform that links advertisers, carriers and content publishers, allowing them to easily interlace ads among all types of mobile content, whether it's a picture message, a video stream or a WAP page. While mobile advertising certainly isn't a new concept, Third Screen's holistic approach to it appears to be unique.
Unlike TV or a newspaper, mobile content is not a single format--numerous content providers are providing all kinds of media isolated on the network. What Third Screen's engine does is manage a mobile content campaign across all of those different formats, ensuring an advertiser's message gets shown regardless of what type of content its targeted demographic happens to be accessing at the time. Currently, ads are "hard-stitched" into materials, either embedded in a Web page or inserted into the video stream, said Heidi Lehmann, vice president of content, strategy and acquisitions for Third Screen. What the Third Screen engine does is allow carriers or content publishers to dynamically insert ads into the content stream regardless of the format. A car video ad, for instance, would lead off a mobile TV clip, an animated banner for the same car would appear on a WAP page or be tagged as a link to the bottom of a text message--all served up from the same platform.
That's good or bad, depending on how you look at it. I can already anticipate the angry e-mails from readers who find anathema the prospect of advertising and spam creeping into your cell phones. And those are legitimate concerns. Unlike TV, newspaper and to a lesser extent the Web, the mobile networks are presence and context aware. Carriers, and by inference their content partners, do not have a good deal of information on their customers, but they know where they are and even have an inkling or two about what they might be doing at any given time, depending on their usage patterns. An advertiser could target all users of a Treo smartphone for instance, a group that tends to fall in a fairly narrow--and fairly lucrative--demographic.
So privacy may have just gone to pot over the mobile network, but on the flip side, the revenue potential is enormous. MobiTV executives have long talked about the great marketing opportunities on their unicast TV platform. MobiTV knows who you are, what you're watching and for how long. With that kind of information, advertisers can craft incredibly targeted advertising campaigns and that's information they'll pay for.
Regardless of what side of the argument you come down on, there's no question these kind of advertising services will gain traction. eMarketer estimates mobile advertising will be a $760 million industry by 2009 in the U.S. alone. If you think those are just fluff numbers, then talk to Third Screen. "We're starting to see $100,000 to $200,000 ad budgets for mobile ads, but that's just the beginning," Lehmann said. "We just closed our first $1.6 million ad spend."

Monday, January 30, 2006

Can Love Blossom via SMS

Just before Northwestern University senior Rachel Clayton returned home from school, her boyfriend told her — for the first time — that he loved her. She was thrilled by his sentiment, but after the initial butterflies subsided, Clayton felt a little, well, cheated.

"I just sat there and stared at my cellphone," says Clayton, 22. "After six months of dating, I couldn't believe that the first time he used those words was over a text message."
Though most couples probably wouldn't attempt to take their relationship to the next level via wireless communication, a growing number of Americans are flirting, setting up dates and even whispering (er, spelling out?) sweet nothings through the digital medium of short message service (SMS).
Sent between cellphones, BlackBerries or other handheld devices, these mini-missives of 160 characters or less offer potential dates a fast, informal way to connect. But while text messages can be endearingly short and sweet, men and women often have polarized opinions about how they should be used in romantic situations. (Related item: Text etiquette: How to avoid pushing the wrong buttons)
"When someone asked me to dinner for the first time over text message, I found it more than a little insulting," says Stephanie Davis, 27, a magazine editor in New York. "So I sent him a reply suggesting that he pick up the phone and ask me out properly. I never heard from him again."