TechCrunch's Mike Arrington unofficially reviews the iPad and this line resonated with my own anticpated behaviour for the device. Link
"I suspect I’ll rarely be away from this device. In fact it will make my phone far less important for non-calling uses (emphasis mine).
I may not have the iPad in my pocket with my phone, but it will certainly be in my bag over my shoulder. With a 3G data plan I’ll use it to read the news, look up movie times and reviews, send instant messages and emails, and lots of other things that I do with my phone. I’m not so sure I need to have the latest and greatest phone device any more, knowing that there’s an iPad within reach."
If I'm willing to carry the iPad out and about I might not automatically jump to a smartphone to do consuming-content-type-stuff (this is location dependent obviously). A phone primarily becomes a voice / sms / and portable camera and that means a big screened smartphone is overkill.
For those individuals that already carry two or more devices (such as a blackberry and phone) I wonder if the iPad will replace either.
We'll see soon.
[Update: August 2010] Ok. Having lived with the iPad for a few months there's one thing that I got right and one I got wrong.
Right: The iPad form factor/consumer appliance in some way shape or form is here to stay over the next 5 years I bet ("I'll rarely be away from this device"). It's being used in the office and at home pretty much constantly and travel inbetween a lot. Like others, the laptop hardly comes out at home anymore, however it's still used on occasions and for now with iPad Generation1, is still needed.
Wrong: Less use of the smartphone by using iPad more (if you're using an iPhone and an iPad). I'd underestimated Apple's iEcosystem + iDevice1 + iDevice2 combination effect. iTunes + iDevice1 is a given (for purchasing and synching apps, music, books etc) and what most users are accustomed to. Hold that thought.
Now add in Apple's Halo effect; iDevice users are more likely to buy other iDevices.
In this case coupling the iPad (iDevice1) with an iPhone4 (iDevice2) provides a more seamless usage across iDevices of the same apps, music and crucially user experience.
I've found this quite useful, dipping in and out ofthe same apps on different iDevices depending on which one is to hand.
Anyone care to comment on what life is like with an iPad + Symbian or iPad + Android smartphone device (or other smartphone)? Do they complement each other in the same way or does it not matter ?
[Update: September 2010] seems iCulture is the word I was looking for ... Link
Saturday, April 03, 2010
iPad impact on Phones
Friday, January 16, 2009
Saturday, December 06, 2008
Mindshare vs. Marketshare

Nokia's announcement of their new flagship handset for the first half of 2009, the N97 (or perhaps just one of them?) got lots of buzz two weeks ago at Nokia World 2008.
As many have commented already, the timing of the device entering the market may be a problem, as other device manufacturer's flagship devices will be refreshed or newly introduced by mid next year. This is normal as part of the device OEM roadmaps, there's always new handsets on the horizon, but a 6 month 'lead' time in today's competitive device landscape for a flagship replacement is a long time off. I wonder whether Nokia wanted to 'get in first', pre-empting Macworld, Mobile World Congress, ceBIT 2009 to recoup some lost Mindshare.
Have Nokia really lost Mindshare this year?
A couple of subjective pointers from the conference lead me to the belief they are now playing catchup:
(i) Having attended previous Nokia World events this is the first time I've seen the competitor devices acknowledged and openly mentioned comparing the G1, Blackberry Storm and the iPhone to the new N97 by Anssi Vanjokki during the ketynote speech.
(ii) Several of the Execs wandering round the event were using iPhones. 2 years ago Execs would have been touting the latest Nokia flagship handset.
(iii) The Ovi email service (see previous post on wondering where Ovi email was) is late in coming to the market, although the upgraded Ovi Maps has potentially leapfrogged ahead of say, Google Maps (too early to say).
The N97 would have been on the drawing board 12 months ago, if not longer. During that time whilst Nokia's Marketshare has remained stable the Mindshare drifted to Nokia's competition. The Sony Ericsson X1, the HTC Max 4G/G1, Samsung Omnia, PradaII, Apple iPhone, RIM BB Bold/Storm etc... are all vying for the top slot and have been the focus of consumer attention in mobile devices in 2008 (versus Nokia's N96 and 5800 Xpress).
All of the above manufacturers will have new flagship devices in mid 2009 to compete. So, whether 2009 Nokia devices and the N97 can regain the top slot flagship product and get back some Mindshare remains to be seen ...
Thursday, November 27, 2008
BlackBerry Storm in a teacup
RIM have been highly successful in the enterprise push email market. So succesful, that anything mobile email related is instantly compared to Blackberry (even POTUS doesn't want to give it up).
However, as Apple starts to creep up its mobile market share with at least a potential new model every year and email/Exchange support, it may be enough to make RIM a casualty.
RIM have not sat back and watched this potential market-share threat of course and we're starting to see the first consumer-focused Blackberries appear into the market, as a response.
The one right now that's getting all the focus is the Blackberry Thunder (but more consumer Blackberries are due early next year). There's already many reviews on the web so I'll keep my own comments brief.
In short the BB Thunder is disappointing. The high resolution display is amazingly sharp and bright and the device has good solid build quality but the major feature of the clickable screen is a novelty and rapidly becomes irritating- taking at least twice as long to do anything as with the non-touch Bold (I just could not get used to the two letters per key on the on-screen keyboard in portrait mode). The browser is ok but multi-touch iPhone users will find it sub-par - no pinch and zoom of course.
There's nice transitions and a medium reponse time when navigating menus and traversing around the OS (except the flip into landscape mode), but the built in native applications don't cut it -the media player crashed several times when trying to play any video for example. It's nowhere near as stable as the Blackberry Bold and left me with a similar impression of the nokia N96 when it first came out - buggy and unfinished. Perhaps some of the issues will be fixed in firmware updates.
RIM have a lot to learn when it comes to consumer-based devices it seems and it's yet-another-iPhone-clone that doesn't come close enough to provide any serious competition.
However I'll still be using the Bold for email until that iPhone with keypboard appears.
Wednesday, October 22, 2008
200 million iPhone App downloads
Apple announced they've seen 200 million downloads of applications from the Application Store in 102 days since launching it, in their F4Q08 earnings call.
2M downloads per day across two devices(iPhone 3G / ipod Touch)... hmmm, I wonder if Handango have similar figures for the last 100 days?
You can understand why the competition are scrambling as Apple put it, to copy this business model.
Monday, September 22, 2008
G1 arrives

There's loads of reviews on the web already of the G1 versus the iPhone and other phones, so I won't repeat an in-depth review here. The conclusion is ... you're going to need to try one for yourself ... whether you like the G1 will be dependent on your main mobile usage (messaging/email/texting/voice vs. data-usage/browsing, content consumption etc..).
Personally I'm not a huge of the form factor of this first HTC Android device but can understand the appeal of a Sidekick+iPhone hybrid (including the Blackberry-like navigation ball). Lots of folk who wanted a physical QWERTY keyboard on the 2nd gen iPhone have a new choice (other full touch screen + QWERTY keyboard devices eg. Prada II are coming later in the year).
There's no soft keyboard option on the G1 which prevents any chance of single-handed in-line text entry (eg. in the browser or messaging apps). The HVGA capacitive display screen is responsive and the webkit based browser is speedy (not quite as polished or smooth as iPhone Safari with multi-touch support).
The Google mobile apps are very well integrated, as you'd expect... (but, what if you don't have a Google account ?)Like the iPhone 1st generation there are missing features both hardware and software based in this first implementation: no camera flash, video capture etc... but they did include copy and paste.
A quick note on my current view of Google's impact in the mobile marketplace a year on since announcing their intentions. The G1 device launch, is a necessity from a consumer perspective to get people thinking "Google do phones" and they can run the same Google applications as on the web (so another consumer choice for mobile-web-based integration a-la Ovi, Mobile Me.. Google have a headstart here because so many normobs use their web based services).
Google have proved they can develop and integrate a mobile OS ('Open' with constraints).
The main question I have now, is whether /how Android will be adopted and taken forward by the OHA to be integrated and deployed across future multiple device platforms ?
Collectively at any one time, the main handset manufacturers are working on hundreds of new devices for release globally over the next 18 months. The OS platform choice the handset manufacturers choose to deploy in these devices (and Operators influence) will be a crucial factor in Android's progress. This question also impacts the developer ecosystem uptake of the Android SDK and Marketplace distribution for free/paid applicatons. Reach is impacted by volume.
Back to the G1....Google's choosing to launch their first Android based device on the current form-factor (rather than a Blackberry-like/Candybar or Clamshell form-factor) has reaffirmed the large, touch-screen phone device is here to stay (with or without QWERTY), implying the continued shift towards doing much more on your mobile device than voice and texting...
Thursday, August 28, 2008
The Future's Cloudy, the Future's Ovi ?
Maybe, but Nokia have a lot more work to do yet.
It's been a while since the last update but Nokia have launched the next upgrade to their Ovi service offering (bringing the web, desktop and mobile harmonisation one step closer).
The new additions are synching (contacts, calendar, notes, tasks) via SyncML, a personalised dashboard with flickr and Ovi share 'widgets' and a desktop PC suite client (Ovi Suite). Multiple devices can be synched to a single Ovi account but mobile web browser access is still pretty limited with these new features (no login/dashboard view).
This complements the existing Remote File Access/Share (from your mobile/online PC) and Ovi Share (photos and media uploading/sharing)services.
Games, Music and Maps (no eMail?) are still to be integrated but Nokia have been listening it seems, for a single unified account login to all Nokia Ovi features with FileShare and new Synch service at least sharing the same login details.
The fixed-browser widget approach is a good move, allowing personalisation of the dashboard assuming we see other Nokia/external widgets being made availabe soon (I would find an SMS-text backup widget very handy ...)
However I think the whole Ovi strategy still way too fragmented for normobs - the multiple logins, multiple access points to the services (synchML, mobile web, web, active idle screen integration of Ovi Share) and the separate Share Online application, N-Gage arena on the device just cause confusion.
I'll assume at some point Nokia will have a centralised approach for device, desktop, mobile web and web and might take a leaf out of Apple's book regards simplicity (although MobileMe has its own fair share of problems too).
In the meantime Zyb, Dashwire, MobSynch, Funambol, SoonR, Orb and the myriad of other services that synch media+contacts+calendars from mobile-to-cloud and/or mobile-to-PC, will need to try and stay ahead of the giant as it continues centralising and improving these services further in its quest to become an internet company.
As usual, AAS have a much more detailed review.
Thursday, August 21, 2008
Mobile bloglines update
I tend to use Mobile bloglines rather than Google's mobile feed reader for staying on top of RSS feeds and this week Bloglines released a new beta version for mobile.
Point your mobile browser to http://m.beta.bloglines.com and you'll be redirected to v3 (the newer version).
New features include: favicon support (turn-offable), ability to follow sublinks within a post but keep the post as unread (useful for continuing reading long posts) and startpage support (if you set the bloglines MyStartpage with favourite feeds - this is now available in v3).
If you prefer the original mobile version there's a link at the bottom to revert back to 'classic mobile bloglines'.
Friday, August 08, 2008
Updates everywhere
I've been using HelloTxt recently to update statuses across multiple (micro) blogging and chat channels. Lifestream updating from a centralised place, I'm finding is rather convenient.
It's a service similar to Ping.fm - and both have been around a while. Both also have mobile (web) access and support updates via email.
One thing I like about HelloTxt is the ability to in-line post a video-clip as well as images (like jaiku) and crucially it has an SMS Gateway for posting updates via SMS.
These services are slightly different from FriendFeed which imports your status updates and is more of an aggregator of other services rather than ping.fm/hellotxt which is a multi-end-destination-status-update tool.
Both services could do with voice enablement from the mobile though (like TwitterFone or TwitterGram) or to link up with the spinvoxes or jott's of the world. The posting options are summarised below :
Ping.fm - Web Interface, Special Email Address, IM Bot, Mobile Interface (including dedicated iPhone), iGoogle and Facebook Apps
HelloTxt - Web Interface, Special Email Address, Mobile Interface (no iPhone version), Posting via SMS, Facebook App
More detailed comparisonshere and here.
If you've got multiple microblogging/chat channels and you want to update them all simultaneously with the same updates you might want to try one of these services out.
Friday, July 18, 2008
The Marauders Map - GeoPresence

Fans of Harry Potter will know the Marauders Map helped him greatly in his adventures.
The map showed him, in real time, the Hogwarts school and where each wizard was at any given moment. (For old gaming fans - the whole concept of seeing where everyone was on a map was like Escape from Colditz boardgame - by Parker - remember that ?)
Finding latitude and longitude from triangulated cell-towers or increasingly directly from GPS chips emebedded in the phone is standard fare and there's many geo-presence mobile services that can pinpoint you and others on a mobile map in realtime.
We built an in-house rudimentary version a while ago (using LBS and Googlemaps) and then added Facebook status on top. I could see my colleagues on a map in near real-time (as long as they had their mobile switched on and were in coverage) with their FB status and they could see me.
It was immediately obvious of the need for privacy and context. (Who wants to be tracked at all times ?) Child/prisoner/friend/parcel tracking and reality mining can all genuinely useful in the right context but getting that bit right with privacy/security/rights etc... is a whole different debate. Still, the technology is there.
I suspect there will be a lot more useful services mashing mobile location together with other features (I mentioned a couple previously such as wikinear and tweet cloud) rather than ** just ** social geo-presence.
Will we see an explosion of mobile-based geo-presence mashups when everyone's got a Marauders map in their pocket ?
Thursday, July 10, 2008
The Social Phonebook is coming (finally) ...
Zyb have now released a beta version of their client app in addition to mobile browser access via m.zyb.com.
It's only officially available (read-optimised) for Sony Ericsson phones right now although it installed on an N78 spoofed as W910i. Here's some of the client features: geo-presence, Social Network/microblog updates and sharing PIM functions (short video below) ...
Nokia launched an IM/Chat beta client today also with geo-presence (AAS review here). The app is integrated into the phone book/contacts as a separate tab (and not the Messaging app). One of Nokia's beta-lab earlier products "Conversation" was also integrated into the phonebook/contacts as an extra tab. We are at last starting to see integration of communi-content into the most social and useful applications on any mobile phone - the contacts/phone book, (**and I note Apple have split off Contacts from the Phone application in v2.0, so that Contacts is now separate - allowing better cross-application integration. Why did'nt the master of UI/UE do this initially is odd - calling is person-centric not function-centric**).
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Friday, July 04, 2008
The Empire Strikes back?
On a lighter note for a Friday and a related theme, you may have seen Google's Mobile Tricks campaign recently launched, and this video below fired off the imagination - will this ever happen?
Tuesday, June 10, 2008
Faster, Better, Cheaper ?
You know the adage right? You can never have all three, at very best two. There's usually a compromise across all three of faster / better/ cheaper. It depends on how you define these terms of course but with Apple's 3G iPhone announcement yesterday here's my initial thoughts.
1) Apple's mobileme: a cross between Zyb + Ovi(?) + Gdrive. Push mail, contacts and calendar with synch and sharing across pc, mac, iphone, appleTv - (not free). What about MS Mesh and the plethora of other backup, synch (funambol,dashwire,lifecache,sugarsych etc..) and share services in the cloud of Web 2.0 ? Will mobileme play nicely with the other web2.0 players for sharing photos, contacts, mail and calendar entries for example or are we back in walled-garden-world ?
2) Interesting to see the planned(?) "leaks" yesterday in an attempt to soften Apple's hype machine ie. the N85, N79 and 5800. Samsung also chose yesterday to launch the Omnia/Instinct - and RIM, well, they already announced the Thunder - classic prememptive tactics ?
3) iPhone battery improvements. Battery-life usually vanishes when multi-tasking multimedia when mobile on a fast connection. Intra-day charging is the norm for me just to survive, on any handset. If it lasts as long as the N78 (just like its predecessor the N73) I'd be happy (pretty sure it won't though).
4) 3G iPhone price point is crucial (£free- £100 tariff-dependent) with contract (18 months x £30 cheapest) - jailbreaking and unlocking will not be possible as in-store activation only? The hacker community will find a way - they always do; although it probaly won't be pretty, simple or quick...Will the mass market uptake (they might with a PAYG option) ?...When you compare what feature-phones and smartphones you can get for the same total-cost-of-ownership over 18 months in the UK - the 3G iphone offer is comparable now at least.
5) 22 countries on July 11th for the 3G iphone launch - 6 million 1st Gen iPhones sold so far, apple ** really ** must want to achieve that 10 million target, by end of the year 2008. Still a tiny drop in a big ocean of handset sales for perspective ...but the co-ordinated release date across 22 countries means word-of-mouth marketing will continue the next 6 weeks.
6) Hardware: No haptic feedback, no front camera, no camera upgrade or video support (what! - do Apple realise 8mp camerphones + xenon flash will be shipping this year in Europe), 16gb max storage (will it be enough - lots of apps will be > 10mb) and no keyboard or better bluetooth. Flush headphone jack (as it should have been). GPS chip and 'perceptively' thinner. Obviously there are tradeoffs, but camera over GPS ? - hmmm, perhaps apple should have attended a music concert to see what people do their with their mobile in this setting.
7) Software (iPhone v2.0) & apps - free upgrade for existing iphone users (good) and lots of interesting rich applications ready to launch (eg. mooCow's Band). Background tasking and push notifications aside (perhaps for another post), no MMS and copy/paste functionality? Lots of enterprise related software support including enhanced vpn, exchange and app-tieing-to-phone features - is this where the real money for Apple is ?
I'm underwhelmed, but from a strategy perceptive Apple are addressing the 3 pillars of consumer (price-focused), enterprise (corporate/security/email application focused) and developer (centralised distribution and strong revenue model plus SDK via the Application store focused) - how they maintain the momentum is yet to be seen.
So faster (3G bearer, faster-to-market than competitors less than 12 months for 2nd gen etc...), cheaper (just) but better?
What do you think ?
Friday, May 30, 2008
Streaming-your-life-away
** Update ** looks like I spoke too soon, Qik adding geotagged video-streams too (from Mobile Monday Barcelona)...
Qik, FlixWagon, Kyte, ComVu, Floobs, CometNow, and Bambuser are all mobile broadcasting services, a couple of which I've played with previously. Qik seems to be the mobile geeks current favourite.
These services allow you to broadcast live video from your mobile and stream it to the web - part of the LifeSteaming or LifeCasting tool set, you'll need for a self-produced Truman show, to be a BBC journalist or NASA operations.
You can notify your twitter, jaiku or pownce followers that you're broadcasting live, right now, allowing interactive comments to be posted into the running mobile app's user interface. YouTube integration for direct streaming upload is also possible with Qik and flixwagon.
Bambuser was at the conference I attended last week and not having seen them before I tried it out, downloading the Symbian/S60 client from http://m.bambuser.com
It's similar to Qik and Flixwagon with a straightforward user interface and to start broadcasting just "connect". One of the features it has over the other services is the ability to GeoTag your live video stream (although an additional sis client install is required) so you can view the stream geo-positioned on a GoogleMap.
(Nokia's Sportstracker widget also now supports video upload although its not mobile broadcast streaming.)
Bambuser indicate there's more integration features coming soon, so one to watch ...
For an overview of how to do mobile broadcasting and more details on the above services visit Steve Garfields blog.
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Friday, May 16, 2008
Zyb bought
I posted the other day about Zyb and why I thought it was the right approach to Mobile Social networking and communicontent (starting from the phone address book) and I see they've just been bought by Vodafone.... interesting.
SMS Text news (who always seem to be first) has multiple posts on their service, including a quote from Vodafone about the acquisition. Official press release here.
I wonder what this means for mobical, mobyko, bloove and anywr.
Friday, May 09, 2008
Touch take 2
I have'nt blogged about devices for a while, what better time for an update...
There's some posturing going on by the big 5 handset manufacturers to have the best flagship, high end, multi-feature phone for their 2008 portfolio - this includes touch screen devices.
Nothing new there of course.
But, since last year's iPhone, the race has intensified to get something close to the user experience it provides 12 months on. We are now seeing the second generation of iphone-like-clones hit the market and if the rumours are true we'll shortly see Apple's second offering too.
Haptic feedback is appearing and more emphasis is obviously going into the user interface and user experience.
Slimness of device has long since been to be a a differentiating feature in the flagship models.
The HTC Diamond (MDA Compact IV), Samsung F480, LG KF750(Secret) are all launching now or very soon and further devices coming later this year include the Samsung Instinct(i900), Sony Ericsson X1 and rumoured Blackberry 9500).
All of the above have great form factors (I particularly like the HTC and Samsung,- the latter being very similar to the LG Prada). They're, thin and small, with large touch screens.
The haptic feedback on the F480 works well and tapping around the interface is simple and response time fast (but the transitions are too slow). Typing a text or email with one hand/thumb is possible since it supports T9-equivalent input and the haptics helped here as did the sensitivity of the screen.
Usually I'm less a fan of the stylus based touch screen devices (like the HTC Diamond /Compact IV) as I find them fiddly and very difficult to use single-handedly even to make calls. However, HTC have introduced their TouchFLO 3D finger based interface (in a nod to the iPhones interface) to address this and there are also third party installable options. This makes the phone much easier to use through a simpler, attractive interface than the traditional windows mobile menu based interface.
With other touch screen devices coming from Nokia, Motorola and devices running Android the second half of the year will see things heat up further in this area.
If touch based devices are not your thing then there's also some great non touch based handsets coming as well, both consumer and enterprise, such as the Blackberry 9000, E71 and N96. I'm sure Sony Ericsson will put some strong top end non touch based devices out too.
Thursday, May 08, 2008
Communi-Content aggregation
Shozu added more high profile end destination partners this week including twitter (& twitpic), photobucket and seesmic.
The microblogging end-destinations such as twitter are an obvious addition (text upload and comment/replies synching back to the phone) and indicates Shozu is heading towards becoming more of a mobile social service rather than just a pure uploading app to web end destination sites.
Flickr comment downloading on your uploaded flickr photos have been supported for a while and now you can receive yours and your friends timeline tweets. Hopefully geotagging text/status updates will be enabled if the end destinations supports it too, (like jaiku).
As I blathered on previously, there seems to be a race on to own communi-content aggregation and there's been a few moves in this area lately. Lifestream.fm was recently bought, Facebook apparently is failing, Ovi is expanding it's reach, FriendFeed continues to be the current web 2.0 darling and other services head towards aggregating all of your content and communication such as the services mentioned here (there's lots more).
Zyb, whilst originally a different proposition from Shozu, is related because it is now evolving from just contact and pim synching service to add in lifestreaming and aggregation. (see picture below). Shozu used to have mobile contact /address book synching but dropped it in the latest client version.
Jaiku, whilst being a micro-blogging end destination in itself, also used the mobile phone address book (in the client based version) to include presence and added the ability to import other web 2.0 service updates (Facebook, twitter etc..).
It looks to me like these types of services are converging and it will be interesting to see which ones go on to be the most successful, those based around the personal/social network, aggregating destinations (for content and/or communications), a hybrid of both or none of the above.
For me, those that include and integrate the mobile phone address book (and synch to the web) are the most interesting. After all the mobile address book/contacts the ultimate personal social network isn't it?
Comparing Zyb's new mobile enhanced contact/address book and Dashwire will be a blog post for a future date.
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Tuesday, May 06, 2008
Tuesday, April 22, 2008
Neighbourhood watch
Loads of web based and mobile communi-content services have integrated location as a default part of the service eg. Flickr, Jaiku, Dopplr, Wayn, Gypsii, ZoneTag, Shozu, GMaps, BuddyPing, Twibble, Twinkle - the list is long... one thing they all lack is context.
Geo-locating content and communication (either at creation or consumption) is being further refined by some newish location mashups, or lashups :)
Wikinear from developer Simon Willison shows you a a list of the five Wikipedia pages that are geographically closest to your current location. It's faster and more convenient than going to wikipedia directly on your mobile and typing in your location.
You'll need a Fire Eagle login, then point your mobile web browser to http://wikinear.com
Wikinear uses Yahoo's Fire Eagle platform to get your location (Twitter is also integrated into Fire Eagle via Firebot to set your location directly via a tweet).
Twitterlocal is another service that filters tweets that are happening nearby within a 1, 2, 3, 5, 10, 20 mile radius (as per previous post for Twinkle). Note there's a high noise-to-signal ratio!
How long before we see hyper-local, time-limited spontaneous advertising / marketing pushed through these types of platforms with access from your mobile (ie. I "follow" the provider costa50bucks coffee in a specific location and the discount code is redeemable only at that outlet) - the rudimentary **context** being provided here is they know I'm "local" and "might" be interested in a temporary discount.
Maybe it's already already happening...
One last service that's also filtering down more locally is TwitterVision which has been updated to allow localisation per country... here's the UK public timeline.
Friday, April 11, 2008
iPhone twitter (native)
** Update ** and another native iPhone twitter client called Twinkle. The difference with this over Mobile Twitter below, is that it also adds in location allowing you to see tweets from people within 1,2,5,10, and 50 mile radius of your current location. Add "www.polarbearfarm.com/repo/" to the installer app.
I posted a while back about a couple of native S60 and J2ME clients for accessing twitter/jaiku and recently I've been playing with a native iPhone twitter client developed by npike.
Add this resource to installer http://apps.npike.net/repo.xml and then download the twitter client from the Npike directory.
Clean and simple UI. I like.
Here's some other twitter based resources for desktop, browser and mobile.

