Tag Archive for 'forum'

Up close and personal with Samsung’s Galaxy S Android Smartphone.

In another first this week, I had a chance to get up close and personal with Samsung’s Android Galaxy S (Model: GT-I9000) smartphone during the Samsung Africa Forum 2010 in Johannesburg (South Africa). The handset is simply stunning and marks Samsung’s first commericial foray using the wildly popular Android mobile operating system. I got a first hand look at the handset and tinkered around with it. There are so many things about it that make it a major milestone for Samsung in its wide arsenal of smartphones. It has a gorgeous Super AMOLED display and the intelligence as well as the userbility of the device come shining though with flying colors.

Having spoken to a good number of executives from Samsung regarding their plans for the Samsung S, I secured reliable information that they intend to launch it in Kenya sometime in September or October 2010. Earlier this week, also as reported on this blog, Huawei and Safaricom launched the first Android smartphone in Kenya which is expected to retail for around Kes. 30,000.00 when it hits the marketplace. The Galaxy S would therefore be the second Android handset to come to Kenya on this basis.

The Galaxy S which has not yet been launched anywhere in Africa yet already has over 100 mobile networks globally who have signed up to launch the much lauded device before the end of the year. In the US, the Galaxy S is already causing waves following its launch recently under the name “Captivate” with AT&T. Many mobile networks worldwide are planning to use the Galaxy S as a linchpin for smartphone market penetration owing to its formidable capabilities.

“The Android-powered Samsung Galaxy S will set a new standard for smartphones, and the excitement we’ve seen from operators and retailers for this device is testament to that,” said JK Shin, president and head of mobile communications business. “The Samsung Galaxy S is the perfect device for people in all corners of the world who want that extra edge; to be more effective, productive, better connected, and in tune with their smart life – both personal and professional – all in a very easy and simple way. We’re extremely confident that this device is going to be very successful in every market.”

As part of Samsung’s drive to democratize the smartphone market, the Galaxy S will be the flagship model of the smartphone range Samsung will introduce this year. It will also offer enhanced opportunities for developers and new revenue streams for operators. JK Shin continued, “Everyone is going to benefit from this revolutionary new device: from the consumer with the phone in their hand, to application developers and the many global operators who have signed up to support the Galaxy S. This truly is a phone for the whole ecosystem.”

Featuring Samsung’s dazzlingly bright 4-inch Super AMOLED screen and a 1 GHz application processor, the Android™-powered Samsung Galaxy S is designed to provide immersive, intelligent and integrated experiences, with the power to enrich people’s lives through best-in-class services and technologies. It will introduce people to the concept of the “Smart Life” – a smartphone experience that is simple, organize and integrated; one that enriches the lives of users.

The Galaxy S features Samsung’s super-fast TouchWiz 3.0 user-interface (UI), giving users instant access to their mobile lives. Smart Life is further enabled through intuitive, integrative features, including the Swype text input service, the rich augmented reality browser, Layar, and advanced Location Based Service (LBS) capabilities.

More than 50,000 applications from Android Market and Samsung Apps will allow users to extend the benefits and excitement of the smartphone experience even more. Users have access to Google mobile services, such as Google Search, Gmail, and Google Maps. Some of the key features of the Galaxy S are as follows:

  • eBook: Provides best-in-class reading experience on the phone. Customizable fonts, easy text search, and intuitive book list management offers convenient and customized reading experience.
  • HD Video: Super fast 1 GHz processor enhances HD video playing and recording features on dazzling Super AMOLD screen.
  • Daily Briefing: Offers instant access to weather, news, stocks, and the scheduler.
  • AllShare: Enables inter-device connectivity via DLNA (Digital Living Network Alliance) technology.
  • Augmented Reality: Shows users’ surroundings and displays information on camera-view. Tele-Atlas POI provides richer information than ever.
  • Swype: Provides fast and easy way to input text on screen while on-the-move.
  • Write and go: Jot down an idea first and later decide on a format such as SMS/ MMS, email, calendar or memo.
  • ThinkFree: Apps to view and edit Microsoft Office 2007 documents.
  • Smart Alarm: Wakes up with a natural alarm sound and automatically turned-on display light.

In addition, the specifications for the Galaxy S are as follows:

Network

  • 2.5G (GSM/ GPRS/ EDGE) : 850 / 900 / 1800 / 1900 MHz
  • 3G (HSDPA 7.2Mbps, HSUPA 5.76Mbps) : 900 / 1900 / 2100 MHz

OS: Android 2.1

Display: 4.0” WVGA Super AMOLED (800×480) with mDNIe

Camera: 5.0 mega-pixel camera + VGA Video Telephony Camera,  Auto Focus,

Self shot, Action shot, Add me, Stop motion, Cartoon shot, Smile shot,

Panorama shot.

Video: HD(720p@30fps) video playing & recording

Codec: Mpeg4, H.264, H.263, H263Sorenson, DivX/ XviD, VC-1

Format: 3gp (mp4), WMV (asf), AVI (divx), MKV, FLV

Audio: MP3, AAC, AAC+, eAAC+, WMA, OGG, AMR-NB, AMR-WB, WAV, MID, AC3, IMY, FLAC, XMF.

Value-added Features

  • Android Market™ and Samsung Apps for more applications and contents
  • A-GPS
  • Augmented Reality with Layar Reality Browser powered by Tele Atlas POI
  • 1 GHz Application Processor
  • SMS/ MMS/ Email/ Video Messaging/ Exchange ActiveSync
  • Sensor: Accelerometer, Digital compass, Proximity, Light
  • Offline & No SIM Mode, RSS Reader, Mobile Widgets

Connectivity

  • Bluetooth technology v 3.0
  • USB v2.0 (High-Speed)
  • Wi-Fi 802.11 b/g/n

Memory: 16GB / 8GB storage, 512MB RAM, external memory slot (upto 32GB)

Size: 64.2 x 122.4 x 9.9mm, 119g

Battery: 1500 mAh

KENIC Marketing Plan for 2010/1

Below is the Marketing Plan presentation I gave yesterday Friday the 2nd July 2010 at the Kenya Network Information Centre (KENIC) Annual General Meeting (AGM) and Stakeholder Forum. I have also provided a link below to some pictures I took at the well attended forum:

The 7th KENIC Open Public Forum: 2nd July 2010.

The Kenya Network Information Centre (KENIC) is having its seventh Open Public Forum today Friday the 2nd of July 2010 at the Sarova Panafric Hotel from 8.00 am. KENIC’s mandate as the .KE registry is to the manage the Kenya’s country code top level domains (ccTLD).

The forum will be a focal point for bottom-up multi-stakeholder discussions of KENIC’s policies and developments over the past year. Thereafter, the same venue will host KENIC’s seventh Annual General Meeting (AGM) to which all stakeholders are invited to attend. Details of the AGM are available online at availed on the KENIC website here>

Brandscape’s 15th Brand Forum: “Branding, what are the new realities”.

Sometime last month I attended the 15th edition of Brandscape’s Brand Forum at Blanco’s in Hurlingham, Nairobi. The forum brought together marketing and branding enthusiasts to discuss matters shaping brand direction and strategy. The forum’s theme was “Branding, what are the new realities” which went further to explore the changing landscape of branding. You can read the full summary of what we discussed here>

InfoDev’s Kenya Focus Group for a Mobile Applications Lab in Africa.

InfoDev is an NGO working within the World Bank that held a stakeholder focus group this week on the 27th April 2010. I attended the focus group which brought together mobile application developers, mobile operators and other stakeholders to brainstorm on the needs and rationale for a mobile applications lab for Africa. The focus group convened at the iHub and was the third such forum following others held in Kampala, Uganda and in Johannesburg, South Africa.

In addition to InfoDev, the concept of the African mobile applications lab is also being supported by Finland’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Nokia. The African lab will be one of three in the world which will also include one in Asia and the other in Eastern Europe. The lab will also function as an incubator for mobile entrepreneurs in Africa. The following are some of the key questions that we’re discussed during the focus group:

  • Does Africa need a mobile applications laboratory?
  • What services should it provide?
  • Where should it be located?
  • What existing initiatives exist in this field?
  • Which applications are likely to prove successful in Africa?
  • With which partners should the lab work?
  • What would be the measure of success?

These we’re some of the responses I was able to capture and document:

  • iHub’s Jessica Colaco noted that she had organized a few mobile bootcamps at the Strathmore University a few years ago that had resulted in mobile application debeloper competitions. She noted that the mobile applications are tools for innovation and problem solving in Africa. She also noted that Africa needs low cost access to mobile information and services.
  • The limits to innovation are really only limited to our imagination, Its important to find out the social structures in Africa for mobile applications as was the case in the success of the Apple iPhone. Safaricom’s M-Pesa is successful because it dealt with socio-economic issues – how about other areas that need addressing?
  • The perception of a participant at the focus group was that East Africans we’re ahead of West Africans in terms of ICT4D as evidenced during a Twitter chat last week. An idea floated was that m-health could be used in a scenario for instance where a blood scan could be emailed to a Doctor via a mobile application anywhere in the world for diagnosis and treatment.
  • Mxit is a mobile application and/or mobile social network that has done extremely well in South Africa so we should not under estimate the importance of mobile applications for entertainment in Africa. Which applications are likely to prove successful in Africa? m-payments? m-health? m-education? m-agriculture? m-security? m-government?
  • Safaricom representative Wadzanai Chioita said, “M-Pesa is successful because it serves as a virtual bank for people in Kenya who do not have access to formal banking services. In addition, it also enables financial transactions for the unbanked population and is also much more convenient compared to more traditional informal financial services that they had used prior to M-Pesa”.
  • Insurance could be an ideal area for mobile applications when looking at the success of M-Pesa as far as financial services are concerned. A suggestion was that the “Chama” (i.e. the popular collective model of informal group financial savings in Kenya) could be a target for a a mobile application that streamlines operations. Could Chama be systemized using the mobile phone and applications? Quite possibly!
  • Mobile applications in Africa work when they solve a BIG problem for many people. However, M-Pesa has not (yet?) been successful in other markets due to the fact that there are stronger regulations than is the case in Kenya noted a participant at the focus group – this is what is holding it back elsewhere.
  • Regulation can enable or disable mobile applications succeeding in Africa. Equity Bank’s success in microcredit in Kenya shows that there is opportunity at the bottom of the pyramid. Could the mobile be leveraged for microcredit focussed applications? Education is another area that could be enabled via mobile applications by using it as a channel for m-learning.
  • It would be important to create an ecosystem of stakeholders to make mobile applications? Millennium Villages in Western Kenya are using mobile phones to successfully collect health data in the field for instance. The African mobile applications lab will be open so that the application developer owns his/her applications at the end of the development process -  which can then eventually be commercialized.
  • Its envisaged that the African mobile applications lab will provide technical and business skills to application developers. There needs to be clear distinction between mobile applications for social good and others for commercial gain. What about when literacy is a problem for the beneficiaries of mobile applications? Could, for instance, speech recognition and voice commands be used to access a mobile application?
  • Mobile notification services could be another area that would thrive for mobile applications. Dorothy Ooko of Nokia talked about Nokia Eduction Delivery which is a successful mobile education project in Tanzania. Teachers use Nokia N series mobile devices to run classes by projecting content for the class. This enables high quality education in rural areas via high speed mobile networks and applications, which has never been possible the past.
  • Its important to think of mobile application opportunities being useful beyond urban Africa so as to rural Africa. Low cost and low bandwidth mobile applications will be especially key for Africa. When Africa is given opportunities like M-Pesa where its the first to be served (globally), its possible for it to become the leader in a specific innovation in mobile applications.
  • The work to be done by the mobile applications lab in Africa will also include agriculture focussed solutions that improve social aspects of the sector. M-Government applications could include an application for applying for and processing immigration paperwork.
  • Kaburo Kobia of the Kenya ICT Board noted that they are already working with a company which is digitizing content for varies ministries of the government, including immigration. Going forward, the Kenya ICT Board wants to work with mobile application developers to integrate this content on the mobile channel.

Additional key questions for the mobile applications lab in Africa that we’re floated at the focus group were:

  • Should it be local or networked?
  • Should the lab be physical or virtual?
  • What services should the lab offer to be self sustaining?
  • With which partners should the lab work?
  • What would be the measure of success?
  • How can it serve Africa as a whole?
  • What business models are likely to work?

Some of the responses that I managed to capture we’re as follows:

  • Dorothy Ooko of Nokia expressed concern that there is serious business capacity lacking in Kenya has they had seen in the Calling All Innovators competition organized by Nokia. She noted that whereas Kenyan application developers submitted ideas/apps as individuals, South African application developers organized themselves into companies which would enable them to secure funding more easily. We need not only good developers but also developers with business-focussed skills.
  • Crowdsourcing could be key factor in driving the development and uptake of mobile applications in Africa by lowering the barriers to entry. A Nokia representative talked about the University of Nairobi’s Nokia sponsored mobile applications lab which aims to act as a low-cost outsourcing centre for mobile applications development for Kenyan and Global clients.
  • The commercial opportunity for the bottom of the pyramid could be more lucrative than the middle and top of the pyramid. The revenue per user is small but the volume is huge. The example given for Nairobi’s Kibera slum which has 1+ million residents. If a mobile application could be used for Kes. 1.00 per day that would be more than Kes. 30.00 million a month in revenue – there is a solid business case in this respect. The best part is that it could be commercially viable and socially good at the same time.
  • Android and iPhone apps are “cool” but the basic mobile apps could be much bigger for Africa. Academia is another area that was touched on. Could mobile apps act as a tool for collaboration across African borders.

Kenyan Mobile Apps and Content to go on Nokia’s OVI Store.

Application Developers and Publishers in Kenya can now publish and distribute their mobile applications directly on Nokia’s OVI Store. The OVI self service tool provides an easy way to distribute and monetize local mobile applications and content by potentially reaching millions of consumers around the world who use Nokia devices.

Through OVI Store, Nokia device users in Kenya and globally will have access to relevant and locally developed solutions that address their day to day needs. Publishers and Application Developers will be able to keep the larger 70% of revenue generated from sales with the smaller 30% going to Nokia via applications and content that they distribute through the OVI Store. This will create a healthy and fair incentive for Application Developers and Publishers to use the OVI Store.

Anyone can publish their won content in OVI Store, by selecting Publish to Ovi or going to publish.ovi.com, or to Forum Nokia. Once registered, you follow the instructions and submit your application and content for distribution through OVIStore. As a publisher for OVI, you will also have access to the publishing guide and more information to assist you in the publishing process.

Nokia Head of Solutions for East and Southern Africa, Agatha Gikunda, said Nokia would work closely with Application Developers in Kenya and innovators to develop locally relevant mobile phone applications. “Nokia is keen on developing personalized and relevant local applications that can used to address local problems that are unique to Africa. We want to raise awareness on how developers can tap into mobile applications thereby improving the local content and also make money in the process,”

Ms Gikunda said mobile phone penetration in Africa has surpassed that of computers and therefore mobile devices and relevant software will play a crucial role in entrenching ICT development in Sub-Saharan Africa. She said Forum Nokia would assist developers get their products to the market quickly and efficiently by delivering resources covering the entire mobile application lifecycle, from development to sales.

Nokia Communications Manager for East and Southern Africa, Dorothy Ooko said OVI Store has the potential to reach over 60 million Nokia devices users globally, expected to reach up to 300 million consumers by 2012, making it the world’s largest media network. “We want to engage developers in Kenya to learn about the latest technologies and business opportunities that are at available at Nokia,” said Ms. Ooko. Ms Ooko asked Application Developers to seize the opportunity to create locally relevant applications and distribute it to as many consumers as possible.

Ms. Ooko also  added that the Forum Nokia seeks to bring Application Developers, Network Operators, Content Partners, Media and Nokia experts together in a truly collaborative learning environment that explores how Nokia can help Application Developers improve their business and tap into the growth in mobile application development opportunities worldwide. Nokia’s OVI Store applications are supported by more than 75 Nokia devices to-date.

Tandaa Kenya meetup on local (digital) content – Photos.

Here is a link to photos from the Kenya ICT Board organized Tandaa Kenya meetup on local (digital) content from earlier this week. You can view them (and tag them!) here>

Brandscape Forum on New Media for Brands.

The following audio files are recordings of a forum on the impact and relevance of new media on brands, especially in Kenya and the broader Pan-African region.

The forum was organised by the Brandscape Foundation and held at the Palacina Hotel in Nairobi on evening of Tuesday the 7th April 2009. In addition to myself representing Dotsavvy, we had Tom Sitati of the Brandscape Foundation, Al Kags of the Kenya ICT Board, Benda Kithaka and Mary Chege of Toyota East Africa, and Joram Mwinamo of Wylde International Enjoy listening!