Archive for November, 2006

Pssst. Winksite Changes Under Way.

Friday, November 10th, 2006

This obviously deserves a detailed post but with a ton of “Lorem Ipsum” placeholder text to replace this weekend that will have to wait.

In the meantime…

At Winksite it has always been our goal to provide a service that supports how people prefer to engage their mobile devices (and each other) rather then what we “hoped” they would do. We purposely developed a tool that was designed wide in order to learn as much as possible. We figured, launch a flexible publishing tool, step out of the way, watch, listen, then respond with innovations. Along the way we talked to hundreds of people, read and responded to thousands of email requests, and participated in the many communities that arose worldwide.

Well, now it’s time to respond. We’ll be building upon what we have learned and go deep for a while. Expect regular, iterative releases over the next 90 days. I’ll post our thoughts throughout and be interested in hearing yours.

So, if you are inclined head over to Winksite to see what’s brewing. Some of what we are up to will be immediately clear, while other aspects will be apparent over time.

And, while we promise not to break anything you’ll notice in the short term a bit of the old mixed with the new.

So it begins. Again.

One World. No Borders. 2.5 Billion Connected People.

Friday, November 10th, 2006

Winksite makes it easy to publish mobile Internet sites and build simple social connections via mobile phones. Over two billion people have a mobile phone, making it the world’s most popular interactive medium. Worldwide, people are not just talking into their phones but reading from them and typing into them.

More mobile phones than PCs are connected to the Internet, but the connections are needlessly complex. Each mobile carrier, each brand of phone, and sometimes each model, place a heavy technical burden on mobile publishers. What if Yahoo had to re-do its web site for Dell, HP, Apple, and others — with modifications based on whether Internet connection is Comcast cable, AT&T DSL, or T-Mobile Wi-Fi? That’s exactly what Yahoo endures on the mobile Internet for Nokia, Motorola, Cingular, and Verizon Wireless.

All this complexity confuses people, yet people are the mobile Internet’s killer app. Mobile phones are personal. They rest in your pocket, not on your desk.

So far, most of the mobile Internet looks like AOL in 1995 — email, chat, and simple games are available via constrained, proprietary interfaces. Struggling to maintain their walled gardens, mobile carriers keep the standards-based mobile Internet at arms-length and make life too hard for mobile users. The carriers are in a rush to sell us mobile video and location-based services, but they don’t provide the ability to build a simple mobile homepage or social profile.

Winksite does. Take five minutes to register and get your basic mobile site and profile launched. Take five more to add your blog, photos, news, or a chat room to your mobile site. Point friends, old and new, to your site via their phones or even their web browser. We’ll make you look good no matter what.

Join Winksite’s quarter million monthly users in 150 countries in the first, simple, concrete steps to making the mobile Internet open and universally accessible.