Category: Technology

  • Nasscom Webinar: Enterprise Mobility – How Secure & How To Make It Secure?

    “Apps” is increasingly becoming buzzword in the Mobile Internet space and while the adoption of mobility is increasing, perils like security go hand in hand unless Mobility practitioners don’t plan aptly.

    NASSCOM brings to you the 2nd webinar encompassing all facets of “Security in an Enterprise World” on the 9th of July 2013 ,where the focus of the webinar will be to understand security threats while designing and developing mobile application.

    The Session Would Cover:

    1. Challenges of Mobile Device Security in Enterprise Mobility Environment

    2. Security Threat Points (Attack Points) – The Device, The Network, The Data Center

    3. Mobile Application Threats (Local Storage, Content, Transport Layer, Limitations of Platform Environment Restrictions etc.)

    4. Security properties every developer should know (Tips and Tricks for Developers and Architects)

    5. Q/A

    Details:

    Date: 9th July, 2013
     
    Time: 16:00  – 17:00  IST

    Who Should Attend?
    • C-suite – CMOs, CIOs, and even CEOs with transformation objectives
    • Marketing Executives looking for innovation in Customer channels
    • Technology Managers evaluating mobility channels
    • Mobility enthusiasts

    Registration: Click Here

    Speaker Profile:

    Keith Katz
    VP – Management Products
    Kony

    With over 10 years in the mobile messaging space, Keith has held Technical leadership and Engineering roles with Research In Motion, Sprint-Nextel, Zenprise, and Kony.

    Since joining Kony in 2013, Keith’s primary focus is to provide vision and leadership of the creation and future of the Management Products division of Kony. This includes the areas of Mobile Application Management, Device Management, and Content Management. In addition, Keith is a frequent contributor and thought leader to the overall wireless and mobile industry to both customers and partners.

    Keith currently resides in Orlando, FL, having relocated from the Washington D.C. area in 2004.

    Kinjan Shah
    Senior Solutions Architect
    Infrostretch Solutions
    Kinjan Shah is a Sr. Solution Architect at InfoStretch Solutions. He has developed over the years a strong expertise and experience around mobile applications and enterprise solutions; with proven track record of forming and leading teams in complex, cutting-edge technology projects. Have served in various roles over these years but always with a focus on technology.

  • Mobile Retail Summit 2013 – London – Highlights

    The 2nd Mobile Retail Summit, which took place on 24 April 2013 at London’s Grange Hotel, was a great experience. Here is the quick snapshot of the event:

    Mobile Retail Summit 2013 – Highlights from MobileMarketingMag on Vimeo.

  • eChai Insights – UI / UX Session – April 20

    Point10, International Center of Entrepreneurship & Technology ( icreate ) and Gujarat Chamber of Commerce & Industries ( GCCI ) Youth Wing are launching eChai Insights – theme based knowledge sharing sessions with the theme – User Experience & User Interface Design ( UI/UX ) on 20th April 2013, Saturday from 4 pm on wards.

    The eChai Insights sessions will provide an opportunity to entrepreneurs, professionals, and students interested in understanding more about UI/UX to learn from experienced UX professionals and have an interactive dialogue. The session has an amazing line-up of Entrepreneurs & UX professionals to present and discuss their work, their thought process and share their insights along with having an interactive discussion with the participants. It would also provide an opportunity to participants to discuss their design challenge with presenters and other participants.

    Details:
    eChai Insights @ icreate in association with GCCI Youth Wing –Theme – UI/UX :
    Date : 20th April 2013 Time : 4.00 pm to 6.30 pm
    Venue : icreate City Office, 1st Floor, GMDC Building, 132 ft road, Nr. Helmet Cross Roads, Ahd – 380 052.

    Presenters for eChai Insights @ icreate in association with GCCI Youth Wing – Theme – UI/UX :
    • Himanshu Khatri, Co-Founder, MediaShala, Mayavi Telecommunication, Gaatha Handicrafts
    • Pankaj Bengani, CEO, Chhavi Media
    • Harsh Panchal, UX Designer
    • Ravi Pathak, Co-Founder, Tatvic
    • Design Team from Digicorp

    Register Here

  • Is The Mobile Web Vs Native App Debate Over?

    Is The Mobile Web Vs Native App Debate Over?

    Mobile Web Vs Native App – One of the most interesting debate in the recent times ! However, gradually, it seems that Mobile Native App has proven to be an preferred choice by both consumers and enterprise mobility technologists.

    Venture Beat declared that the mobile war is over and the app has won: 80% of mobile time spent in apps. According to app analytics firm Flurry, which tracks app usage on a staggering 300,000 apps on over a billion active mobile devices, Americans spent an average of 158 minutes each and every day on smartphones and tablets. Two hours and seven minutes of that is in an app, and only 31 minutes is in a browser, surfing the old-school web

    Native Apps offer rich User Experience, intuitive features, integration with multiple systems and stronger encryption for Enterprise Companies.

    Leading retail companies prefer Native Apps over Mobile Web to drive special promotions and deals, give product information, leverage loyalty programs also provide added features such as games and interactive tools related to their brands.

    Interestingly HTML5 is a useful tool for creating Hybrid Mobile Apps.

  • Tesco Shopping App – Example Of Future Of Retail

    We have been working on a long list of innovative ideas for Retail Industry and helping global retailers maintain their brand leadership.

    The Tesco App is an good example of embracing mobility in retail industry. VB shared a link about the Tesco Shopping App – The Future of Retail.

  • Mobile World Congress 2013 – Recap By Chetan Sharma

    I am a regular follower of Chetan Sharma’s blog. He has recently shared his notes and comments on Mobile World Congress 2013. Please find the same note here.

    Chetan Sharma on Mobile World Congress 2013

    Welcome to Spain, Thank you for your business,” remarked the immigration officer and thus started my yearly pilgrimage to the grand slam of mobile – The Mobile World Congress 2013. It is truly a global event with participants from virtually all countries looking to do business, learn a thing or two, and ponder over what the year will bring forth. The show moved to a new venue which made the logistics work much better for attendees and exhibitors but the venue lost its charm and character. We used this opportunity to feel the pulse of the industry and understand where things are headed. This note summarizes our observations from the show.

    While there was no blockbuster announcements or products that will knock your socks off, several interesting trends emerged that will keep the industry exciting to watch in 2013.

    The perennial search for the #3 ecosystem continues: Windows sales have disappointed thus far, Blackberry has launched new devices but hasn’t quite hit the mark. So, while consumers seem perfectly happy with iOS and Android, industry’s desire to have a third robust ecosystem is palpable. The biggest announcement in that regard was from Firefox OS and in a matter of 12 months, it has not only forged a strong alliance with operators, it is actually getting ready to ship phones. It is going to be targeting the low-end of the market which is a smart strategy but a lot depends on the range of price points of the devices and how quickly it can attract the developer ecosystem. Given that Android device price points are hovering around $50 and it is a mature ecosystem with great developer reach and support, it will be challenging to convince consumers to go the Firefox route. However, if the price points are attractive enough, with the distribution power of some key operators, we could see some early traction. Ubuntu, Jolla, and Tizen were also vying for attention.

    LTE everywhere: LTE deployment is growing at a very fast pace. The US market is ahead of the curve with almost national footprint from Verizon followed by substantial coverage from the remaining three operators. Elsewhere, operators are gearing for deployment once some of the spectrum issues/auctions are sorted out.

    The 4th Wave has arrived: Last year, we put forth a framework for future mobile industry revenues in our 4th wave paper. Since then, the framework has been embraced by many leading operators around the globe. It was good to hear operators talking more about services rather than data plans. Several areas were discussed by the leading tier 1 operators such as health, retail, education, cloud, M2M, automobile, enterprise, security, connected living, home security, commerce, identity and privacy, big data and analytics. Operators who are able to steer their giant organizations to focus on services will be able to survive the commoditization of access. We will have more say on the subject later this year.

    Yo OTT, luego existo: which is Spanish for “I OTT, therefore I am” To be a player in the digital world, one has to be an OTT provider for communications and beyond. The interesting dichotomy of the communications OTT business is that very few will survive. The end state of a majority of them (if not all) is either an M&A with a telco or an Internet player or they run out of cash. The new breed of OTTs has forced the lumbering giants to think different about their customers and their markets.

    Mobile Broadband, Cloud, and Apps: The troika of broadband network access, the cloud infrastructure and the applications are creating a sea change in the enterprise, especially the SMB segment. It is also changing how developers see the enterprise segment as the opportunity migrates from windows to iOS and Android. We conducted some in-depth research in the space and will have more to share later this year. Our Mobile Breakfast Series later this month will be dealing with the topic of Cloud and SDN in more detail.

    Redefining Monopoly: The mobile and internet worlds have collided but the regulatory regimes haven’t changed. European operators seemed to indicate that it is time to reassess what a monopoly really means and the rules should apply to all layers of the ecosystem stack and that means devices and OSs as well.

    Device Launches: All major OEMs are following the Apple playbook as far as the device announcements are concerned. To garner media attention, it is best to announce the “hero” devices away from major shows. Just like CES earlier this year, MWC lacked any big device announcements. Nokia announced mid-low tier devices to expand its portfolio that will help it in unit sales. ZTE, Huawei, LG, Asus, NEC, Sony, HTC, HP, Asus, Acer, Lenovo all had new devices to display but media’s eyes are set on Samsung’s Galaxy release later this month.

    Local OEMs: Traditional OEMs are facing some healthy competition from new entrants in local markets. Players like Fly and Yotaphone in Russia are giving the veterans a run for their money. By both innovating with new features but also by customizing the devices for the local market (e.g. bigger battery that last 3 days), they are creating their own niche. After gaining good market share in Russia, Fly is expanding into other markets.

    Connected Cars: When the biggest operator by revenue announces a deal with the biggest car manufacturer, people take notice. GM and AT&T announced LTE cars by 2015 which will pretty much force the entire auto industry to provide broadband connectivity in a hurry. However, the auto industry has misplaced expectations on apps and any incremental revenue they might be able to harness from them.

    Samsung Knox, Blackberry – can you hear me now: Android is probably the most insecure mobile platform out there. Blackberry has long been the gold standard, iOS has improved, Windows has security features built in but security has always been a step-child of Android. Samsung’s Knox announcement elevates Samsung’s role in the mobile enterprise and to some extent takes over some of the development capability of Android that are squarely aimed at Blackberry. The container security feature set with MDM integration is well thought out and opens up the mobile enterprise market for Samsung especially in North America and Western Europe.

    Spectrum and Regulations: While spectrum was a universal issue with the operators, more is better, European operators were particularly vocal about the state of the regulatory affairs on the continent. Regulators, they complained, are killing the industry by cutting of revenue opportunities, are fostering too much competition, too much taxation, and too involved in the operations of the operators. This is leading to declining revenues and turmoil at the operators. There might be some unintended consequences of weakening operators and regulators will have to grapple with some interesting questions that a free market economy will pose in the coming days.

    TU Go – Take your phone number everywhere: In our opinion, Telefonica has done the best job of dealing with the digital world in putting forth an org structure that can crank out applications and services at Internet speed. TU Go is a new service (launched in UK) that allows users to take their phone number to any supported device and use it for calling and texting – number in the cloud at its best.

    NFC is dead, Long Live NFC: Vodafone CEO’s frank admission that he doesn’t expect to make much money from NFC gave the audience a bit of a pause. Several NFC initiatives have floundered without clear goals or vision. Instead of working together, the industry has remained fragmented and thus the lack of scale has hampered progress. For too long, the industry has focused on payments but the opportunity lies in the engagement with the customer. For better or for worse, the financial industry has sequestered its commission for the foreseeable future. We saw some clever NFC implementations to drive consumer engagement and commerce in retail environments, primarily in Europe.

    Consolidation looms: The question that is on everyone’s mind but was hardly discussed at the show was the coming onslaught of consolidation at virtually all layers of the ecosystem.

    Developing Markets: Connecting the next billion was a recurring theme. The smartphone penetration in the developing world is in the single digits. More than that, introducing consumers to a computing platform for the first time is an exciting opportunity. Creating services that are tailored to the local environment remains an opportunity that can have a profound impact on society. Our own work with the UN/ITU has shown the transformative role of mobile in almost every walk of life. The device unit growth is coming from the developing markets and as they get connected, the world becomes flatter, and the competitive dynamics in a globalizing world will create for some interesting policy and political battles.

    M2M and Internet of Things: As we wrote in our book “Wireless Data Services” back in 2004, the connectivity is becoming pervasive. The module costs are coming down fast and the desire to measure and track every number that is important in our lives is creating a massive opportunity. However, privacy, battery life, environment, security remain key issues that need to be tackled.

    Identity as a business opportunity: In a digital world where access to information and resources depend on verification of your identity, the guards and keepers of the identity information have a big role to play. As such, “identity” management is emerging as an opportunity that can be monetized. In the online world, Facebook has become the dominant way to integrate apps and services. In the mobile world, operators can play a significant role in authentication and verification. Will the two worlds collide? Fasten your seat belts.

    The Post PC world: As an experiment, for the MWC trip, I carried just the Nexus 7 tablet and an iPhone. I felt liberated. In the past, for day trips, I have relied just on iPad/iPhone for taking care of my computing needs. For this trip, I wanted something that I can carry in jacket pocket. Nexus was good enough for taking simple notes, email, browser and even some phone calls. I could easily switch back-and-forth between the tablet and the phone, and the combined battery life lasted the whole day.

    The Miscellaneous:

    · Google’s absence from the show puzzled many

    · The enthusiasm for RCS/Joyn seems to have subsided as reality sets in

    · Nokia is broadening the reach of its HERE platform to other operating systems

    · AT&T/Ericsson showed WebRTC demo

    · Facebook announced messaging partnerships with operators in developing countries

    · Small cells remained a hot topic though seen more of a compliment for the macro network

    · Signaling traffic continues to grow at a faster pace than the data traffic as more LTE devices come on the network

    · Qualcomm launched RF360 solution to deal with frequency band fragmentation which is serious problem for LTE roaming

    · Yotaphone with its dual screen (front and back) and NEC Medias with its stacked up screens had something fresh to offer in the devices space when 99% of the devices look the same

    · Virtualization is the new black in mobile networks

    Best booth: Ericsson’s networked world theme was well thought-out and provided a unique exploratory view of the opportunities and technology evolution. A close second – Connected City.

    Best party: There won’t be an MWC without the bevy of parties every night. Qualcomm again stole the show with the jam-packed confluence of the mobile elite.

  • Who Drained My MacBook Pro Battery? KiesViaWifiAgent !

    My MacBook Pro was acting very strangely. It was running very hot and fans were running constantly. The full charge on the battery was draining very quickly. In less than an hour !

    I thought it was my Outlook and Mail software – but it was not the culprit. Nor was my iPhoto. There was no fixed pattern when the fans would start blowing like a car engine – though after a reboot, things used to work fine !

    I opened the Activity Monitor. I caught the culprit today. It was a process called Kies Via Wifi Agent. I had installed Kies for sync with Samsung phone when I was trying an App on Samsung. It was using 90% of CPU and causing battery to drain. I deleted the App – no time to think ! Life is better now – hopefully !

  • Vibrant Gujarati : Launch Of Global GujaratiLexicon

    Gujaratilexicon completed 6 years of remarkable journey on 13th January 2013. On this auspicious occasion, Gujaratilexicon introduced Global Gujaratilexicon – a vision to bridge Gujarati with the leading global languages of the world.

    The world is becoming a global village. Our Gujarati friends have made their mark across the world and made us proud. Our Gujarati friends are now looking east and have developed strong relations with China and Japan. Gujaratilexicon is looking to cater to the language needs of these friends and help them.

    Global Gujaratilexicon has been launched with Gujarati-Japanese and Gujarati-Chinese lexical resources. The project is launched with the 5000 Gujarati – Japanese and Gujarati – Chinese words in Phase I. The website will help Gujarati – Japanese – Chinese businessmen, students, researchers, translators and tourist to find words in a single Click.

    Japanese and Chinese Businessmen will find that ‘Vibrant Gujarat’ has ‘Vibrant Gujarati’ as well !

    Global Gujaratilexicon search result will display Gujarati word and its English and Japanese – Romaji meaning along with the pronunciation in Gujarati. The same feature is available for the Chinese words. Website also offers converted sentences for basic day-to-day communication.

    For instance, if we want to Thank Anyone in Gujarati, we will say ‘તમારો આભાર’ and in English ‘Thank You’, what if we want to repeat the same in Japanese and Chinese ! The answer will be ‘Arigatō gozaimasu’ (‘આરીગાતો ગોઝાઇમાસ’) and ‘Xièxie’ (’શીએશીએ’).

    The success of the Global Gujaratilexicon is a vindication of a 90 year young visionary, Shri R P Chandaria. His relentless passion and missionary zeal for language moved across continents and organizations. The launch of Gujaratilexicon on Jan 13, 2006 as a megalanguage portal was a starting point of ongoing language initiatives. Saras Spellchecker, Bhagwadgomandal, Lok-Kosh, Crossword, Quiz, GL Gems, Kids Games have enlarged the vision.

    In addition to these, Gujaratilexicon has 13 New Ideas for Year 2013 :

    1. Gujarati – Japanese Dictionary
    2. Gujarati – Chinese Dictionary
    3. GL YouTube Channel
    4. New Games
    5. Gujaratilexicon Mobile Application
    6. Graphical Interface Of GL Web Portal
    7. Law Dictionary
    8. Medical Dictionary
    9. Technical Dictionary
    10. Sanskrit – Gujarati Dictionary
    11. Urdu – Gujarati Dictionary
    12. Graphical Computer Ni Clicke
    13. GL Books

    Gujaratilexicon is inspired to continue our vision of modernizing and spreading Gujarati Language through adoption of latest technology. Gujaratilexicon Team is looking forward to cater Techno-Language projects to the Gujarati Lovers in the year 2013.

  • JWT’s 100 Things to Watch in 2013

    JWT’s 100 Things to Watch in 2013

    Future-gazing is a challenging exercise which highlights the evolutionary trends and visionary breakthroughs. The new year is a time that brings future-gazing into front and we usually see lot of new predictions. Ann Mac, Director of Trendspotting and his team at JWT Intelligence have produced a list of the 100 Things to Watch, which predict the ideas that could shape our world in 2013.

    According To JWT, the list is based on research across sectors such as travel, technology, food, retail and sustainability and the list reflects the major developments bubbling up. Technology takes the spotlight once more with “appcessories,” digital ecosystems, flexible screens, and responsive Web design topping the list. Other top things to watch include new foods and ingredients like faux meat and chia seeds. There are emerging trends like quiet products, shopping hotels, mindful living, privacy etiquette, and adult playgrounds.

    I reviewed the list and I can see these things clearly unfolding in the world:
    Appcessories
    Instant-Erase Apps
    Medical Smartphones
    Live-Streaming Life
    Mobile-Optimized Goes Mainstream
    NFC Tags
    Online Groceries
    Paperless Education
    Passwords 2.0
    Prime Time for Second Screen
    Responsive Web Design
    Social Media Hacks
    Stress-Monitoring Apps
    Tablet Shopping
    User-Based Insurance
    Tech-Enabled Farm-to-Fork
    Biometric Authentication
    Wireless Charging
    Window Shopping
    Data Scientists: The New Hotshots
    Detoxifying Life

    Check The Slide Share presentation of JWT Intelligence for “100 Things To Watch In 2013“!

    100 Things to Watch in 2013:
    1. 3D Bioprinting
    2. Adult Playgrounds
    3. African Tech Stars
    4. Allergen-Free
    5. Alternative Brand Currencies
    6. Ambushed by Amazon
    7. Appcessories
    8. The Arabic Web
    9. B2C/P2P Partnerships
    10. Bee Venom
    11. Biometric Authentication
    12. Blocking Social Media Bores
    13. Chia Seeds
    14. Click-and-Collect Shopping
    15. “Cloaking”
    16. Coaching Brands
    17. Cool Techie Camps
    18. Crowdsourced Translation
    19. Cutting out the Middleman
    20. Cyber War
    21. Dads in the Aisles
    22. Data Scientists: The New Hotshots
    23. Decline of Chinese Bling
    24. Desalination
    25. Detoxifying Life
    26. Digital Ecosystems
    27. Drones
    28. ecoATM
    29. Egg Freezing
    30. Emotion Recognition
    31. The End of Voicemail
    32. Faux Meat
    33. Fitness Beyond the Gym
    34. Flexible Screens
    35. Food Sharing
    36. Frontier Markets
    37. G20 Devolves to G-Zero
    38. Gender-Blurred Toys
    39. Geofencing
    40. Green Growth
    41. Handwriting = Hieroglyphics
    42. Hotels in Africa
    43. Human-Centered Tech
    44. Humane Food
    45. Hyper-Personalized Customer Service
    46. Impact Sourcing
    47. Imperfection
    48. Individual Attention
    49. Instant-Erase Apps
    50. JOMO (Joy Of Missing Out)
    51. Live-Streaming Life
    52. Low-Cost Robots
    53. Low-Tech Device Charging
    54. Media That Gets to Know You
    55. Medical Smartphones
    56. Menu-Free Dining
    57. Midcalorie Foods
    58. Mindful Living
    59. Mobile-Optimized Goes Mainstream
    60. MOOC Stars
    61. Nature As Antidote
    62. Neurotechnology
    63. New Digital Royalty
    64. News Bites
    65. NFC Tags
    66. Objects With Attitude
    67. Offset Thinking
    68. Online Groceries
    69. Paperless Education
    70. Passwords 2.0
    71. Patchwork Earnings
    72. Personal Data Ownership
    73. Prime Time for Second Screen
    74. Privacy Etiquette
    75. Quiet Products
    76. Reduced-Guilt Candy
    77. Responsive Web Design
    78. Retailers Enable Recycling
    79. River Cruising
    80. Self-Service
    81. Serialized Digital Fiction
    82. Set Jetting
    83. Shopping Hotels
    84. Social Media Hacks
    85. Standup Desks
    86. Stress-Monitoring Apps
    87. Sugru
    88. Tablet Shopping
    89. Tech-Enabled Farm-to-Fork
    90. Teff
    91. Trade School
    92. Trust Ratings
    93. User-Based Insurance
    94. Variable Pricing
    95. Vegetable Boxes
    96. Vertical Farming
    97. Video Games As Art
    98. Window Shopping
    99. Wireless Charging
    100. Yogurt Shops

  • Mobile Ticketing Experience Needs Improvement !

    Mobile Ticketing Experience Needs Improvement !

    Working on weekends and holidays has implications for marital bliss. I tried to compensate via movie tickets for the latest flick.

    Since I was away from the office and at client location, I decided to use mobile ticket booking apps. My first choice was BookMyShow App. The start was very quick – dates selected, movie selected, theatre selected, tickets chosen…but oh oh…Try again ! It happened for 3-4 times. Patience is a virtue, but not always.

    Let me try the PVR App. It was trying to auto-detect my location. It tried and it tried and it tried. I was wondering why did it not have an option for me to input my location manually.

    Mobile Maven Kinjan was with me. He tried to download a multi-booking app on Blackberry App World. He got weird results when he typed Book My Show. I tried Cinemax App. All were same !

    Finally, I gave up ! We had spent more than 45 minutes on this exercise. It had also partly to do with our own bias and secret hope that some Mobile App would work. You always believe in the medicine you preach – mobile nirvana !

    I went to the theatre on the way back to home. Got my tickets booked in 90 seconds via the good old box office counter!

    There were many culprits – badly designed apps, faulty logic, failure in back-end theatre connectivity, unreliable 3G Networks, discovery of new apps, failure of thinking customer experience etc. Think like the end user when designing the app – remove our internal bias – and the magical Instagram and Flipboard like app would there! And would create more smiles !