The Voice Is Mightier Than The Pen

If that phrase doesn’t ring any bells for you, don’t worry. Google seems to say it’s the first time it’s been said. On the other hand, some may feel they recognize it from somewhere. They may be remembering that Robert Mitchell in September this year took the diametrically opposite position with his article, The Pen Is Mightier Than the Voice.

The reason for this difference of viewpoint is that Robert Mitchell was talking particularly about Desktop PCs and what input devices might work most effectively for them. In comparing voice-control and pen technology, Mitchell quoted Don Norman of the Nielsen Norman Group as follows, “As usage needs and technology changes, however, one of these technologies is more likely to gain ground as a viable alternative“. Perhaps that article comes to the right conclusions about Desktop PCs, but perhaps the answers are different if we consider mobile devices.

The same Don Norman is also cited in a more recent item, The phone of the future, from the Economist Print Edition. Norman says, “The cellphone is not a telephone. It is a-I don’t know what it is. A communications device? A tool I carry in my pocket?” Don Norman was the author in 1998 of “The Invisible Computer“, a book that somewhat prophetically predicted that computers would eventually be so integrated into everyday items that they would vanish.

The mobile devices that will be leading the growth of the Mobile Web are clearly cellphones. The very restricted screen size of cellphones and the difficulty of entering data bring new challenges. Two recent news items point to the coming conflict as to whether the voice or the pen will prove to be the viable alternative.

YellowPages.com has now added extra functionality to its service by allowing users to send a Local Search text message to their cellphone. Sounds a little same-old, same-old to me.

Contrast this with the acquisition of MobileVoiceControl by Nuance. Nuance is a leading provider of speech and imaging solutions for business and consumers. MobileVoiceControl provides a speech-enabled service that allows consumers to easily dictate and send email or text messages, dial a contact, create calendar entries, and search Web content entirely with their voice. Just think what that combination can do for your cellphone.

So which will prove to be mightier for mobile devices, the Pen or the Voice? Time will tell, but the answer seems clear.

Tags: , ,

Send To Mobile

Send To Mobile can be regarded as either Good News or Bad News. It’s a new feature on YellowPages.com, so presumably something extra should be good. As they say, “Now you can send a business listing or driving directions directly to your mobile phone using the YellowPages.com Send to Mobile link!

The Mobile Web is where the really big money will be made in 2007. So any serious local search player will need to have a mobile strategy. YellowPages.com is the first of the Yellow Pages websites to do this, but the others won’t be far behind. In doing this, they are only catching up with the major local search engines such as Yahoo Local, Google Maps, Windows Live Local, and the IAC properties Citysearch and AskCity.

The downside of this is that it is an example of not working hard enough on the One Web principle. When one device must send the available content in another format to another device, that’s not the One Web principle in action. The ideal of course is that Local Search can be done directly on the Mobile device with results returned to the Mobile device. That will likely only be a satisfactory user experience when the Mobile Device can use interactive voice recognition processes to accept and respond to the Local Search request. Until then, I guess we must continue with that Send to Mobile link.

Tip of the hat: Search Engine Land

Tags: ,

Will Google’s Greenbacks Be Orange?

2006 has been a great year for Google. It’s also been a great year for the Mobile Web, which has expanded at a much faster rate than the regular Web. Like all the other search companies, Google is determined to get its share of that Mobile Web action. Since cell phones are clearly the fastest growth mobile devices, they must figure strongly in any Mobile Web strategy.

That’s why a story that Tom Hume found in The Observer (Guardian Unlimited) would seem to be very credible. Apparently Orange executives have visited the Googleplex. According to the article:

Their plans centre on a branded Google phone, which would probably also carry Orange’s logo. The device would not be revolutionary: manufactured by HTC, a Taiwanese firm specialising in smart phones and Personal Data Assistants (PDAs), it might have a screen similar to a video iPod. But it would have built-in Google software which would dramatically improve on the slow and cumbersome experience of surfing the web from a mobile handset.

If this does become reality in 2007, by the end of the year a large proportion of Google’s greenbacks could be colored Orange.

Tags: , ,

Hidden Mobile Gems

Hot Mobile News

Visa Invests in Mobile Payment Facilitator
Visa is making a strategic investment in mFormation and has forged a strategic alliance with the mobile device management (MDM) solutions provider. The companies plan to work together to advance over-the-air (OTA) solutions for mobile payments.
Toshiba Launches New IP Desk Telephone
Toshiba has announced its new Toshiba IPT2010-SDC IP Desk Telephone, which includes an Analog CO line interface for local dialing, including emergency calls. It is compatible with Toshiba’s Strata CIX family of IP business communication systems for small- to medium-sized enterprises, national accounts and government users.
Workshop On The Mobile Web In Developing Countries
The Workshop on the Mobile Web in Developing Countries was held on 5-6 December in Bangalore, India. Jataayu Software hosted. Participants discussed mobile Web access within developing countries in terms of needs, blocking factors and potential uses.

Wap Review has an interesting piece on MSNBC?s Hidden Mobile Gems. MSNBC is the cable TV news channel operated by Microsoft and NBC and it has a rather good mobile web site. It’s a multi section news portal somewhat like the CNN and the BBC mobile sites. It does not have in house reporters but draws on the wire services or other publishers like Business Week, Forbes and the National Geographic.

The mobile website would seem to be far from the One-Web principle that the W3C organization is promoting. There is apparently no dedicated URL for the mobile site but if you’re using almost any mobile browser, the site’s browser detection kicks in to serve you mobile pages. Although the front page lists only nine sections (Business, Sports, U.S.News, World News, Politics, Tech & Science, Entertainment, Health, Travel, there are actually a number of additional mobile sections which are more or less hidden. These are the mobile gems that the author talks about. Overall the total viewing experience is most satisfactory and follows many of the recommendations of the Mobile Web Initiative.

In other words, the MSNBC team has decided to create separate web pages for mobile devices rather than making the desktop PC web pages offer a satisfactory user experience on Mobile devices. This seems the practical solution that many website owners will offer. The One-Web principle is just not for them.

Tags: ,

Search the Internet for other related articles.
Loading