Archive for the ‘Industry’ Category
Buzz off, Facebook

In contrast to a week allegations of “internecine warfare among Microsoft’s established divisions and a dysfunctional corporate culture that squashes innovation” comes yet-another-innovative-Google-product, Google Buzz. Google Buzz is Mountain View’s first convincing entry into Social Networking, that isn’t limited to merely an API.
Gina Trappani, posting on Smarterware, says it all: “This ain’t no Orkut.”. Google are very serious about taking down Twitter and Facebook.
Jason Calacanis, posting to his email list this morning, made it clear that he sees this as a major challenge to facebook:
1. Google Buzz 1.0 is better than Facebook after six or seven years.
2. Facebook’s history is one filled with stealing other people’s
innovations and doing them better (i.e. Zuckerberg has stolen every
idea Evan Williams and the Twitter team have released). How ironic now
that Google has out “Facebooked” Facebook. Google3. Google has excellent privacy record and Facebook is a disaster.
Most folks do not trust Zuckerberg and Facebook any more because of
their privacy record (filled with lawsuits) and because they steal
every good idea they see (i.e. Twitter’s innovations and FourSquare’s
checking in).4. Google Buzz auto generates your network–this is MUCH better
process than Facebook’s.5. Google Buzz is way faster than the sluggish Facebook–this is a
HUGE advantage.6. Google Buzz puts relies and updates into your GMAIL as
threads–this is BRILLIANT and a HUGE advantage.
Perhaps Jason is spot on. It certainly does seem that Google has almost everything in place to flip the switch, and take over the Social Networking space.
- Status
Google: Buzz Status and GTalk Status
Facebook: Status - Photos
Google: Picassa,
Facebook: Photos - Videos
Google: YouTube,
Facebook: Videos - Email
Google: Gmail since 2004
Facebook: Project Titan (not yet released) - Instant Messaging
Google: GTalk with XMPP/Jabber
Facebook: Facebook Chat (XMPP just released) - Applications
Google: Not yet.
Facebook: Farmville, and a few others. - Media Sharing
Google: Google Reader, YouTube
Facebook: A mix of rss importing tools, and (possibly) the recently purchased FriendFeed.
The only problem, in the words of the imitable Reinhardt Zündorf, is: “This is lame, now I can’t find out which dog I am (via a five bullet questionnaire) and share it with my facebook friends”.
No VoIP for iPhoners without Wifi
It sounds like Dave Gale had a bad day with his iPhone 3G and Vodacom today.
I’m on the road today, between a client site [that's us] in Westlake and the home office when I discover that Vodacom have decided I don’t need to talk to anyone. I call my wife 3 times in a row to hear her repeating “HELLO?” in more and more exasperated tones while I bellow fruitlessly into my headset, then rip the headset out of the phone just in case it is on the fritz, not the network. Nada. No joy.
So I think, no problem, I have Skype and Fring on this pocket rocket-phone, I’ll just call via Skype-Out.
Not so much.
The iPhone SDK restricts apps from using the GSM network to make VoIP calls. The user has to have a Wifi connection via which these VoIP calls can be switched.
Dave continues (with links added by me):
They charge us far more than they should for calls, duck and dive when they’re pressured to reduce prices, and then it appears they block us from making use of VoIP over 3G.
The tragedy is that this should not be a problem for South African iPhoners. It is AT&T/Apple policy that has shaped the App Store’s T&Cs to protect the cellular network’s traditional voice business interests. It is Apple’s monopolistic behaviour that has landed the Cupertino-based powerhouse in hot water of the past.
But there seems to be some light in this iTunnel, according to Engadget Mobile:
AT&T’s restrictive network policies might have been behind some of the more notable iPhone app rejections in the past, but at least one major class of applications just got the green light, as Ma Bell just opened up iPhone VoIP calls over 3G. We can only assume this is the result of the FCC’s renewed push for net neutrality and AT&T’s argument that it’s doesn’t need new regulations to remain open, but — what does this mean for you? Well, Skype on the road, for starters, but we’re guessing a flood of interesting new VoIP apps will hit just as soon as devs can get their apps updated and submitted.
In the meantime, here’s the timk.co.za hacky work-around:
- Get yourself an old phone that has a Wifi chip in it (I use an old Nokia E65 with my iPod Touch when on the move)
- Download and Install JoikuSpot Light – a free symbian app which turns your device into a Wifi Access Point to serve up the phone’s 3G connection.
- Connect to the JoikuSpot from the iPhone’s Wifi Manager.
- Make your Skype/Fring calls
Hope that helps! If it doesn’t, you might be better off with one of these.









