The Chicago Convergence

You bring the digital sparks, we'll supply the gasoline.

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Heartland Mobile

The Vision for The Heartland Mobile Council: Chicago, the heart of America, is the best place to bring mobile technology to general consumers because we bring Real Knowledge, Real Experience to Real People.

Website: http://heartlandmobilecouncil.com
Location: Chicago, IL
Members: 59
Latest Activity: 1 day ago

Discussion Forum

Hugh Jedwill

Next Heartland Mobile Council Meeting is September 8th, 6pm 2 Replies

Started by Hugh Jedwill. Last reply by Hugh Jedwill Sep 8.

Tim McQuillin

New blog post about mobile media and retail

Started by Tim McQuillin Aug 22.

Hugh Jedwill

Notes for Heartland Mobile July 14th WorkSession

Started by Hugh Jedwill Jul 17.

Hugh Jedwill

Looking for iPhone app developers

Started by Hugh Jedwill Jul 15.

Hugh Jedwill

Heartland Mobile - June 23rd mini-conference call at 8:30am 1 Reply

Started by Hugh Jedwill. Last reply by Hugh Jedwill Jun 23.

Hugh Jedwill

MoMoChicago Start-up Showcase on June 29th at 6pm

Started by Hugh Jedwill Jun 23.

Hugh Jedwill

Heartland Mobile June 9th WorkSession 2 Replies

Started by Hugh Jedwill. Last reply by Hugh Jedwill Jun 17.

Hugh Jedwill

Heartland Mobile May 11th WorkSession notes

Started by Hugh Jedwill May 13.

Ray

Promotions through the Mobile Medium 1 Reply

Started by Ray. Last reply by Clancy Ryan May 13.

Mobile Marketer

Brands to dedicate 15-20 percent of digital spend to mobile: Smaato CEO

In the wake of receiving $4.5 million of Series B funding, mobile advertising company Smaato Inc. is optimistic about the state of the mobile industry.

Mobile Commerce Daily - OfficeMax enters mobile commerce

Today in Mobile Commerce Daily: OfficeMax enters mobile commerce, Moosejaw exec speaks to retailer’s mobile strategy and Estee Lauder’s Aveda extends reach with mobile commerce platform.

Mobile Marketer's Mobile Women to Watch 2010

Mobile Marketer’s Mobile Women to Watch 2010 list celebrates smart women who are expected to make a difference in mobile advertising, marketing and media in 2010.

Home Depot holiday mobile ads help consumers with gift giving

The Home Depot is running expandable ad units within The Weather Channel iPhone application as part of its Tool Gift Guide holiday initiative.

TeenNick launches SMS sweepstakes to promote philanthropy

TeenNick, the teen-centric cable channel offshoot of Nickelodeon, has launched an SMS sweepstakes in conjunction with its new HALO Awards show.

Comment Wall

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Tim McQuillin Comment by Tim McQuillin on April 21, 2009 at 12:41pm
In case some of you haven't seen it, I just came across Mobile Marketer's 2008 Classic Guide to Mobile Commerce. It gives a nice cross section of topics, and was useful for a broad look at what's going on in mobile commerce. I found it on Acuity Mobile's website:

Included is an example of Sears mobile commerce efforts as well as an article by the founder of ChaCha Search based in Carmel, IN.
Bruce Eric Montgomery Comment by Bruce Eric Montgomery on April 16, 2009 at 10:55am
How Apple Put Everyone In an App State of Mind

By Om Malik, April 13, 2009

(gigaom.com) -- Sometime in the near future, Apple (AAPL) is going to announce that a billion little apps have been download for use on its iPhone and iPod touch platforms. As of yesterday, about 945 million apps had been download. That translates to about 31 apps per iPhone/iPod touch out there. As it crosses the billion-apps mark, the company is showing that once again it has been able to take an existing, mundane business and turn it on its head. It panned a lead mine and struck gold. When the company took on the seemingly moribund music downloads business and turned it into a constantly clanging cash register, its detractors often bemoaned its autocratic ways and tight control of the iPod ecosystem. Apple, nevertheless, changed consumers’ behavior from downloading music on Napster to actually paying for it, and in the process, it became the largest digital downloads retailer.

Something similar is going on with mobile apps and the iPhone/iPod touch ecosystem. Apple certainly isn’t the first company to have apps for its platform — that honor goes to Palm (PALM), which ruled the PDA planet, thanks to its thousands of developers. Nokia (NOK), Microsoft (MSFT) and RIM (RIMM) have had developers writing clever apps for their Symbian, Windows Mobile and BlackBerry operating systems.

But neither the handset makers, the carriers, or even the OS vendors were able to create a user experience that allowed us to browse, search and download the app that really mattered. Perhaps they didn’t care enough — so long as the mobile industry maintained its status quo. Mike Rowehl, a mobile industry insider, writes:

The entire system was deadlocked cause no one with the power to was really interested in shaking it up. We kept getting fed excuse after excuse justifying the general lack of forward progress on all fronts. But then something comes along that makes it easy, often profitable, and frequently even fun to develop for mobile again. Apple has exposed the fact that the lack of progress in mobile wasn’t something inherent in the system. That someone with the right motivation can really shake things up and get the train moving again.

Since Apple’s iTunes for apps, almost everyone has jumped on the App-store bandwagon. RIM just announced its very competent App World store for BlackBerry. Microsoft is cooking one up, and Nokia has Ovi. Google has its Android Market. Every carrier is cooking up its own version of the app store. The current app store market is no different from the digital music download business in 2005. The market confusion helped Apple eventually become the dominant player, with Amazon presenting the only viable challenge.

Ask mobile app developers, and an overwhelming number are going for iPhone platform first, everything else later. Rowehl writes:

I’ve developed for just about every platform, and I know the ecosystem extremely well. It’s not that I’m blind to everything else. I know everything else that’s out there, and because of that I’ve chosen to develop for iPhone.

He’s not alone, as I pointed out earlier. According to some reports, Nokia’s Ovi store is being ignored by developers, even though Nokia ships many millions of smartphones every month. It seems folks at Nokia are aware of the problem at hand, though I’m not sure they quite get the extent of the apathy among developers. Earlier this month, when I met Anssi Vanjoki, executive V-P of markets at Nokia, the discussion unsurprisingly shifted toward Apple’s iPhone and the developer momentum.

“There is momentum with other platforms, which is good for the industry, as developers are now thinking about developing for mobile devices,” Vanjoki said. “But the situation is not static, and when products like N97 come to market, lots of people will develop for Nokia. We have to show volume, ease of development and show them (developers) the money.” Nokia clearly has its work cut out for it, if developers like Rowehl are any indication.

From a consumer perspective, what really matters to me is the long-tail of apps that are easy to find, download and install. I may have given up on AT&T’s (T) iPhone, but I have not given up on the iPhone platform. Why? Because of the applications.

On my iPod Touch, I have three dozen apps installed, only a handful of them (like Facebook, NetNewsFire and Last.fm) that are free. Some are part of my daily work and play life: Sonus Controller, MLB.com At Bat, Plusmo’s Mobicast, Evernote, Skype and Truphone. There are others that are indispensable to me: iBP, Weight Track and Blood Sugar. Prior to downloading these apps, I recorded my daily blood pressure, weight and glucose levels on a piece of paper, entering the data into a spreadsheet later and mailing it to my doctor every month. These obscure apps aren’t likely to be on the top 10 anytime soon, but they are on my top 10.

As Apple’s latest TV spots for the iPhone say, “There is an app for pretty much everything.”

With nearly a billion downloads, you can say that again. To all the other contenders, good luck catching up.

(*) 945 million apps divided by 30 million iPod touches and iPhones.

Bruce Montgomery
http://twitter.com/onepresence
773-410-0608
Nicholas Paredes Comment by Nicholas Paredes on March 28, 2009 at 12:25pm
OnStar will allow Twittering from cars? Oh dear! Perhaps a new paradigm around mobile needs to be developed. Mobile is the quality of being in motion with access to information tools. The device actually matters little.
Floyd Webb Comment by Floyd Webb on March 24, 2009 at 10:03pm
Here is a source of Mobile Analytics we all need to be aware of. This was passed
Nicholas Paredes Comment by Nicholas Paredes on March 23, 2009 at 10:22pm
This Mobile Monday focused on plans for the next six months. Watch the MoMo Chicago blog for updates. There will be a bunch of new events focusing on startups, technology, business, advertising/marketing, and interaction design.
Nicholas Paredes Comment by Nicholas Paredes on March 23, 2009 at 1:50pm
Food for thought! What if that were a mobile device of other sorts?
Floyd Webb Comment by Floyd Webb on March 19, 2009 at 7:01pm
I know this is kind of tired and you have heard it all before, but My 3 minute movie, Deadliest Man Alive has been distributed to Hulu.com and to Babelgum.com.

My 3 minute doc was produced exclusively for CINELAN, which features the world's great documentary filmmakers, including: Marilyn Agrelo, Grant Gee, Steve James, Kelly Loudenberg, Ross Kauffman, Liz Mermin, Jerry Rothwell, Morgan Spurlock, Jessica Yu and Jeremiah Zagar.

It will be featured on the new Babelgum Iphone App that will be released Friday , March 20, in the Itunes Iphone Apps store.

This is pretty major in that it bolsters my argument for funding to complete the feature length documentary. The short film, with the right subject matter and good promotion can have a great net effect on the expansion of film ideas from short to longer formats.
Nicholas Paredes Comment by Nicholas Paredes on March 18, 2009 at 4:16pm
We obviously discussed this, but our perspective is iPhone centric apps, so I doubt I would fit the role well… Anybody going to Mobile Monday next week?
Clancy Ryan Comment by Clancy Ryan on March 18, 2009 at 3:36pm
We have one set for March 31 6-8pm. Awaiting confirmation from Hugh.
Michael Kelly Comment by Michael Kelly on March 18, 2009 at 3:33pm
Can we schedule a physical meeting for this group and it's members...perhaps a gathering at Timothy O'Toole's downtown?
 

Members (59)

Hugh Jedwill Clancy Ryan Tim McQuillin Floyd Webb Mark Smithivas Jason Rubinstein Nancy Munro Sean Laughlin Nicholas Paredes Denise Dorman John Patterson Michael Kelly MichaelBurns Elliot Benn Floyd Webb Ray Dave Sloan mjb Evan Olson Dilip Patel Brian Joosse Bruce Eric Montgomery jswi_jim Jeff Judge John Yaworsky Charlene Todor Krecu George Tuvell Phil Castello Nathan Uno
 
 

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How do you share/transfer digital media? 5 Replies

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HTTP REST AJAX 1 Reply

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