RrankK

Thanks to Sid for pointing me in the direction of RrankK.

He kindly created a new poll just for me and of course that was about mobile devices. You can see it on the sidebar of my blog (so if you’re using the RSS reader I suspect you’ll have to click to see it).

Make sure you cast your vote, we haven’t added all vendors, but you can easily add more.

UPDATE: I removed the links from the sidebar and added within the post. If you don’t see anymore, it means the poll has been deleted from rrankk. 😦

http://www.rrankk.com/topics;summary?topic_id=106&style=top5

Calling the mobile old-school!

If you were there in the early days of WAP and miss the initial experiences of WAP 1 development, you probably need a doctor. If the doctor can’t do anything, you have a chance to expose all your feelings to the community and get a nice post by James.

So make sure you take out all your inner feelings about WAP 1, why you loved it and why you miss it, answer the call: Calling the mobile old-school!

Submit Mobile Websites and Win $100 Cash

Ryan at MobileMammoth just sent me a link to a contest they launched. The contest is quite simple, provide your favorite top 5 sites, the best list of sites will get 100 USD. It’s not a fortune but I like the idea of sharing the best sites, so let’s post them!

Submit Mobile Websites and Win $100 Cash

Also, I suggest to the visit the homepage because they provide links and comments of mobile sites regularly.

First impressions about Nokia MOSH

I had just posted about Nokia MOSH and it’s a restricted beta, luckily I already got my password to access it. I created an account and uploaded my first content. I was really testing the site in parallel on my Mac and on my mobile phone.

Very first impression is that it’s an interesting new social site. It has all the common features such as upload a photo, invite a friend, exchange messages. The first question that comes to my mind is “So what’s new?”. Not very much I’d say, if you don’t consider that it’s made for mobile devices first and ALSO features a web interface. The main concept here is to be able to upload contents from your mobile device. This is nice and probably Nokia’s commitment is promising, but I don’t see it SO different from what Flickr Mobile has been offering for a while or even ShoZu.

But the very first question that came to my mind even before completing the registration was how they would recognize devices. The e-mail clearly stated that they will do their best to support all devices. Well, look at the image below and think…

I believe they are using WURFL. Not very hard to guess since it’s free and very well supported by many developers, but at the same time you might expect a different approach from Nokia. Are they using WURFL as-is? Did they patch and optimize the Nokia devices? Are they going to give back to the community?
How can I say it’s WURFL? If you look at the screenshot you can see a few things that hinted this to me such as “Research in Motion Ltd” instead of “RIM” or “Blackberry” that are much better known names than the complete company name. Another thing is the duplicated “Vitelcom” and “VITELCOM for Telefonica Movistar”, I remember adding those values and wondering if they should be merged or not. Then there are a few brands that you would not expect to be possible to be picked from a list of devices such as “W3C”, “WAPUniverse” and “WinWAP Technologies” (the first one is obviously not a device manufacturer and the other two are companies selling a browsing software). Also, if you look at the list of Sony Ericsson devices, you can see the “W810”, “W810i” and “W810c”, but the “W810” does not exist, it’s a virtual that device we defined in WURFL and the different localized versions (i for Europe, c for China and a for Americas) inherit from it most of their capabilities if not all.

Going back to the service, I liked that once I completed the registration it suggested to point the browser of my mobile device to a mosh.nokia.mobi. Accessing the site via your desktop browser provides the very same interface… Since they have a version optimized for desktop PC’s it would be good to be automatically redirected to the other version OR have a link. Nokia, if you are reading, I suggest you use is_wireless_device from WURFL.

One bug that I already found was that when trying to upload from the mobile, I could specify the tags. There was no mention of how to do it, so I used commas as on blogger.com, but this did not work, so the upload was not successful. Since I was using Opera, I could not pick a file from the filesystem, but I had to use the camera, so I had to take another picture and, even worse, some, but not all of the information I had provided was lost such as the tags (of course) and the content title. This one needs to be fixed.

Questions still open are:

  • is the site able to recognize the device while browsing and let me know which contents will be appropriate? Using Opera Mini it did not seem to pick it up correctly (but the pages looked very good).
  • how will they be able to keep out pirated contents. I have uploaded one image and it is now waiting for approval, but still I can’t imaging people at Nokia testing all the applications on any possible device.

Building a mobile device test suite – blog post

When I wrote my first blog post about joining dotMobi and launching a new device database I crossposted on my blog and on dev.mobi’s blog. That seemed OK as I thought the announcement was big, was about work and personal life, from now on, I will try to keep posts that are dotMobi oriented on dev.mobi and other posts (technical and personal) here.

Anyway, since dotMobi, mobile devices and programming in general are so much part of my life, I think it’s OK to post a trackback to the blog posts I make on dev.mobi.

This week I wrote an article about building a test suite for mobile devices. WURFL had one, I later started to build a new one for WURFL, again, but never got to complete it. dotMobi will develop a test suite along with the device database, so this blog post is about that.

Building a mobile device test suite

Symbian Newsletter, August 2007

A couple of links that I think are particularly interesting in the August newsletter that I received from Symbian:

  1. Nokia’s MOSH beta, A user-generated content platform designed specifically for use with any mobile device. Create, upload, collect and share applications (like games, software mashups, videos, blogs, music and photos) all from your mobile.
  2. Symbian Developers Wiki, there’s also a competition