It seems that MySpace has cooked up a new mobile version of their software that will work on more than just Nokia phones. Now if they can just get their web site to stop hanging all the time while I’m trying to view pictures of my kids. Go check it out.

I did a video for DownloadSquad which seeks to answer the question, “is the N800 really an iPhone killer?”  Check it out here!

Andy has a bit about Pudding Media, which wants to monitor customers’ phone calls in order to deliver targeted advertising to them. Oh and give those calls away free. The catch? You’ve got to be at a PC. For that reason alone, Pudding is going to flop. Skype is already (basically) free, as are Gizmo and Sightspeed and a host of other PC-based tools. Andy points to a very cranky Silicon Alley Insider post that decries Pudding Media as “doomed from the startup“.
But there’s nothing wrong with the fundamental idea behind putting: use information gathered about network usage patterns to place targeted ads in front of the consumer. That’s the formula that made Google the largest purveyor of advertising in the world… and it’s MySpace’s bread and butter. If you’re a guy, you get ads for a dating site with chicks. If you’re a chick, you get ads for dating sites with guys. And so on and so forth.

The day is coming, people, when Google does exactly what Pudding is doing–except it won’t be restricted to a PC. It’s be device-neutral and ubiquitous. And no, maybe they won’t listen in on phone calls. Instead, they’ll keep track of who you’re calling (say Joe’s Pizza Shack) and target ads to you (say Domino’s Pizza). Called three transmission shops in a month? You might get an ad for a new car dealer. Very Google-like.

- First Quarter ’08 launch.
- OS will be a flavor of Linux.
- 3G, not 4G.
- Carrier partners not named yet, but soon.
- Hardware partners in progress now.
- Announcement within a month.

I wrote a Working Mac feature for Macworld magazine–an FAQ about VoIP calling. It’s in the October 2007 issue or you can read it online.

It was bound to happen. Every couple of years, the FCC’s mandate for an all-high-def, all-digital broadcasting standard slides back a few more years and all the stodgy folks who swear they’ll never buy a new TV get to breathe a sigh of relief. And as usually happens with the perennial digital TV slideback, tech-heads the world over roll their eyes expectantly, as if digital TV ubiquity is somehow important to the TV-watching public at large.

Today, it happened again. The Federal Communications Commission let the mandatory date for eliminating analog-only local TV broadcasts to slide until 2012, while keeping the mandate to cease network-to-affiliate analog broadcasts during early ’09. What does this mean for us? Maybe nothing as it turns out. One oft-named promise of digital TV has always been interactivity, yet TV is still about as interactive as watching paint dry. Above and beyond locating a program, recording it, and skipping through it instantly, digital TV hasn’t accounted for a major shakeup in the way people watch the tube.

Indeed, TV watching isn’t being changed by those pushing digital as much as it’s being changed by Internet-based entrants into the marketplace. While grandma clings to her late-model Zenith CRT, 2.0 properties like YouTube are federating highly-targeted, user-empowering video content, while startups like Vlip and Joost seek to create the interactive videotopia that’s still outside of digital television’s reach. Many people prefer to control and manage video content using the web as opposed to the TV–no schedules to follow, no Tivo to program, and just about all the video content one finds online is available on demand. The manner in which Net-based consumers do video is a far cry from Grandma’s Zenith, because the Net is much more open and organic than the limited, realm of broadcast TV.

So the net effect of the FCC’s slide on the digital TV issue may be nothing–many of us already watch digital TV. Others of us have kicked the TV habit altogether, opting for on-demand content from  our favorite web sites, iTunes, or NetFlix.  How do you get the majority of your video content these days?

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Hey guys and girls, I received some great news from Alec at Iotum. The Canadian voice 2.0 jewel is embracing Facebook whole-heartedly by creating a voice conferencing application for the business-friendly social networking site. Future plans include the addition of Relevance Engine smarts, which, upon first release, aren’t yet implemented. The service will provide conferencing capabilities using North American phone numbers, with plans to add international numbers in the near future.

Iotum recognizes that Facebook is the social networking site with the fastest-growing community of business users, and I can personally vouch for that. The site is easier to use than business-only 2.0 property LinkedIn, and Facebook’s roots in the college student arena make it a natural fit for business: when college kids graduate, they go into the workforce. Smart.

Here’s hoping Iotum’s conferencing add-on for Facebook is a huge hit!