Archive for the ‘Wireless’ Category

ChimpIt Walk-Through / SXSW 2011 Launch

Tuesday, March 8th, 2011
ChimpIt. You are here.  Here's what's near.

ChimpIt. You are here. Here's what's near.

Ever since Gowalla launched at SXSW 2009, notebook users worldwide have felt neglected.  While the check-in wars have waged on between Gowalla, FourSquare, and Loopt (who?), notebook users have sat on the sidelines wondering why smartphones get all the cool apps.

  
The wait is over.
  
For two years, the slowpokes at Less Networks have labored to bring the world a better WiFi experience and they call it “ChimpIt.”  ChimpIt is a small downloadable notebook check-in app with a few interesting characteristics.
First of all, you don’t need to check in.  ChimpIt is a convenient “no check-in required” app because it can automatically detect your location down to the business and street address–often without having to select from a list.  For those of you lucky enough to have stalkers, don’t worry.  ChimpIt doesn’t automatically share your location, but you can if you want.  And since you’re on a notebook, the “experience sharing” capability makes it very easy to type out a rant to your Facebook friends about why the coffee sucks or the mud pie is faboo.
  
At first glance, ChimpIt looks like a simple mash-up of the usual players, Google, Yelp, Facebook, WeatherUnderground, Fandango, etc, but on closer inspection you realize that the ChimpIt team has cleverly assembled and fine-tuned these trusted brands in a way that is surprisingly convenient.  There’s a video demo on the website, but here’s an example.  If you are a traveler and you just arrived at your hotel in a strange city, ChimpIt will somehow figure out which hotel you’re at and then build a neighborhood portal to help orient you to your new surroundings.  It provides the weather, local deals nearby (more on this later), local radio stations and movie listings, a Google map on steroids, and a curious list of strange faces.
There’s seems to be more here than meets the eye.  Let’s begin with the local deals nearby, apparently sourced by fellow Austin startup WantandFound.  WAF allows anyone to type in their favorite drink special, culinary discovery, or shopping bargain, and then syndicates it.  ChimpIt organizes WAF deals by distance from your location.  Since anyone can submit a deal, there’s no quality-control, but on the other hand, the user community can publish and share deals way more effectively than the businesses themselves.  It seems to work out and provides tourists and travelers access to some local knowlege that might not be readily available.
  
Just a big mash up, or more?

Just a big mash up, or more?

The Google map at first is a yawn.  I mean, what’s so special about putting your location on a Google map?  Well, let’s give ChimpIt some credit for figuring out your location first.  Even though you just checked into a hotel, doesn’t mean you actually know your exact street address.  That comes in handy when it comes to navigating to your next destination and ChimpIt has got that down in spades.  Simply search for something like “taco” or “ATM” or “gas” and it becomes clear that the ChimpIt dev team has optimized your Google search to your exact location.  Instead of taco recipes or the history of the petroleum industry, you see exactly where the nearest locations are and if you click you get a bunch of reviews from all the usual sources.  If you click some more, you’ll get specific driving, walking, or transit directions.  The Google map on ChimpIt is a real sleeper, but possibly the most useful of all of ChimpIt’s capabilities.  You may find yourself shifiting more of your searches to ChimpIt even when you’re at home.

Okay, let’s take a closer look at those strange faces trailing down the right side of the screen.  Those are supposed to be “strangers nearby” but when you click on them, they seem to be from random places.  The ChimpIt team says that as more people use ChimpIt the list will become more accurate, but in the meantime, they are casting as wide a net as is necessary to fill the list.  But that begs the question–why would I want to meet strangers?  Well, if I’m at a conference or an airport lounge, that could come in handy.  After all, aren’t we the socially mobile jetset because nearly every opportunity is a networking opportunity, the never-ending mobile mixer?  Interestingly (and not surprisingly), it’s apparent that some of these strangers have already begun the process of mixing because you can see their public shout outs.  You don’t need to be a nun to know that there’s some adult friend finding going on.  This aspect gives the act of “chimping” a whole new meaning…
  
So let’s wrap up this walk-through up. ChimpIt is a notebook app, not a smartphone app, although it’s clear that it seems to bring together some of the best features of the smartphone apps and bulks them up with meatier content. You can get just about everything ChimpIt does without ChimpIt, but it’s awfully damn convenient to have the little monkey pull everything together for you automagically.  The local deals are way cool provided they’re accurate.  The optimized Google map is exactly what it should be.  The strange faces make me feel funny on the inside (I’m married) because it feels naughty even though I can tell myself I’m simply networking for business.
 
The ChimpIt folks call their new toy the best “here you are” app for notebooks.  It might well be the best update to “here you are” technology since someone stuck an arrow on a map for the very first time.  Take ChimpIt with you when you travel.  You’ll know what I mean.

ChimpIt launches at SXSW 2011

Tuesday, March 8th, 2011
ChimpIt. You are here.  Here's what's near.

ChimpIt. You are here. Here's what's near.

ChimpIt, the social location-based app  (aka “Here you are” app) for notebooks launches at this year’s SXSW in Austin, TX.  Users of ChimpIt will enjoy the benefit  ”no check-in required” as they use WiFi hotspots–ChimpIt will automatically detect their location and check-in for them.  They can optionally share their location or their experience at a location with their Facebook friends.  The benefits of checking-in or “Chimping” include:

  • Accurate nearby search results (find the nearest tacos, atm, or beer)
  • See local deals nearby (cheap eats and drinks that only locals know about)
  • Handy nearby Yelp reviews
  • Weather, news, gossip, movie listings
  • Discover and meet people nearby

Download ChimpIt and add smarts to notebook WiFi experience!

Watch the demo video here here:

http://www.chimpit.com

New Smart WiFi features!

Wednesday, June 2nd, 2010

Thanks to the prospective customer in Washington State for reminding us that we hadn’t updated our blog in a while!

We’ve actually got a lot to talk about. On January 1, we rolled out a whole set of social media features. Why did we do this? Because it makes sense. Think about it. If your customers are in your store and are trying to access your WiFi to get to the Internet, what better time is there to let them know that you have a) a website, b) a Facebook page, c) a Twitter page, and d) an email newsletter!

So how do we help you connect to and engage your customers with your digital marketing?

1. Landing Page Experience: Now we rotate the Landing Page among all of your digital properties. We do this randomly so that the experience doesn’t get static and boring. It’s a lot better to show your customers your Twitter page than to have a paper sign that tells them about it!

2. This may be the coolest feature of them all: Location Sharing. We now give all your customers the opportunity to share their location in your store with their Facebook friends. If they do, then their picture and your logo will appear on their Wall. Most people have 130 Facebook friends so that means your branding will get in front of a lot of people every time thanks to this digital word of mouth marketing. How many of your customers friends would you have been able to market to today without this cool feature?

3. Automated Twittering: Your Twitter followers want to hear from you daily but sometimes it’s hard to remember to do that. We now have a cool feature that lets you pre-schedule Tweets in advance to make sure that you remain active, even when you’re too busy to break away. This doesn’t replace interactive Tweeting, but it keeps the channel open and your customers happy. Use this feature wisely to send unique tips and trivia about your business.

That’s all for now and thanks being Smart WiFi customers!

–r and the Less Networks team

Twitter 360 App Gives Tweets Some Augmented Reality Love

Wednesday, December 2nd, 2009

Twitter 360

Twitter 360

Twitter 360 App Gives Tweets Some Augmented Reality Love

BY Kit EatonTue Dec 1, 2009 at 10:50 AM

I got all excited about Twitter’s geotagging feature before, and now it’s getting a new spin that wraps in another neat technology: Augmented reality. Enter Twitter 360, an AR iPhone App that puts Tweets in a global navigational context.

It’s a product from Presselite, the company that snuck the very first AR iPhone app into the App Store under Apple’s nose before the system had been officially enabled. It has a slightly familiar look and feel to those of you who’ve used the company’s Metro map apps. Essentially it superimposes Tweets from your Twitter feed onto a view of the world through your iPhone 3G S’s camera–each Tweep responsible for the Tweets gets a digital tag in the AR view that corresponds to their approximate location (if they’ve just used a generic location in their Twitter settings) or a precise location if they’ve switched on the new geotagging feature.

Read more…

[via Fast Company]

Less Networks CEO receives 2009 Wireless Industry Leadership Award and runs away

Friday, November 6th, 2009

Texas Wireless Summit 2009

Texas Wireless Summit 2009

[This is an acceptance "speech" that I did NOT make when I accepted the "2009 Wireless Industry Leadership Award" last night at the Texas Wireless Summit held in Austin.  They could have just hit me on the head with it and I couldn't have been much more stunned.  I regret to say that I sent this acceptance note via email the morning after. Worse yet, I forgot to include my co-founder and CTO Arun Chatterjee.  I'm sorry, Arun.  Thanks for taking my initial call just before you went down the ski slopes, thanks for signing up to take the ride, thanks for watching me make mistakes as a first-tine CEO, and thanks for building the vision and putting into reality the engineering behind the words.


And now, if you have the stamina, read on... --rcm]

Now that I’ve had a chance to sleep on it and reflect on the day, I realize that by sheepishly accepting an award without saying anything other than “thank you” was a missed opportunity to recognize and thank the friends and supporters that share the honor with me.  I’m sorry for robbing you all of the well-deserved limelight, but I hope you can appreciate that I really was caught off guard when I was singled-out to accept the “2009 Wireless Industry Leadership Award” on your behalf.  While receiving a cheap email note pales in comparison to being recognized in front of a room full of your friends, I want to make the effort to “publicly” and personally thank you all on an open cc list so that you too can take this opportunity to think about how we managed to convince the world, for a while, that Austin was at the center of the wireless universe.

I’m reminded of the recent discovery that Austin is NOT the live music capital of the world.  We’re not even #2.  We’re number #3, according to one authoritative source.  But when the news media tried to stir up controversy by checking in with local club owners, they were surprised to find that the majority of local music movers and shakers were pretty satisfied with being #3, behind New Orleans and New York, but ahead of Nashville, Chicago, Vegas, and all the rest.  And to be honest, I think many in the music industry were surprised that Austin even ranked that high.  The hubris of claiming to be the best at something comes with a price, yet passing up an opportunity to strive for something worthwhile is a shortcoming.  I’ve always thought of our unofficial music motto as more of a vision statement than a statement of fact and I’m proud of our community for striving towards that goal and even more proud that others are beginning to share our vision for how we see ourselves someday.

The Austin Wireless City Project began as a vision for where I saw we could be and in many ways we’ve gotten there.  But in many other ways, we have fallen short.  I guess that’s the hallmark of a good vision–you don’t want it to be fully realizable–complete accomplishment needs to be just beyond the reach.  The media and public love rankings.  It’s a great way to have a horse race with winners and losers all neatly ordered from top to bottom.  In almost every industry, the participants being ranked are rankled by the inherent and often insidious problems with the methodology and bias that eventually sorts everyone out.  It wasn’t long before the WiFi world had its first ranking.  The research was funded by Intel.  The opportunity I saw, was to measure something that I perceived was considered irrelevant by the bean counters–the degree of free-ness.  I didn’t want to see a world of “pervasive,” for-pay mobile access.  I knew that the phone companies would do their part to bring that into reality without my help.  I was convinced that WiFi didn’t need to go that way as well.  So, in a fit of hubris, I did my own research and ranking and declared Austin as the “free-est” wireless city in the world.  I confess that I coined the awkward word “free-est” so that it would be easy to track the meme through Google.  I sent out a press release and at that moment, we actually became the free-est wireless city in the world.

The Austin Wireless City Project has the mission to improve the quality and availability of public free WiFi in Austin, but a mission without do-ers is just a vision statement.  In the beginning, we had and needed lots of volunteers to build hotspot servers, talk to community businesses, install and maintain equipment, and support the hordes of early-adopter end-users.  We were fortunate as an organization to have been born out of a high-quality gene pool consisting of the DNA from EFF-Austin (Jon Lebkowsky, Ed Cavazos, Gene Crick), Austin Free-Net (Ana Sisnet, Sue Beckwith, Charlie Scott), the City of Austin (Pete Collins), the Austin start-up community (Chris Boyd, Eric Stumberg, Erin Defosse, Bart Bohn), the Austin wireless industry (Liz Maxfield, Dave Roon, Jim Keeler), and UT (Sandy Stone, Gary Chapman, Leslie Jarmon).  Our heart was in the right place and our profit motive was couched in community service and economic development.  At times, it felt more like activism than a service organization and increasingly, I became involved with an amazing group of international colleagues fighting for digital access, inclusion, and literacy.  My relationship to this fight and with its participants on both sides, will likely prove to be one of the greatest challenges of my career.

You see, while having a vision of free access is as cheap as the words to say it, it’s actually quite costly to accomplish.  The technology required to support Austin Wireless in its mission had to be created.  A new start up was born, Less Networks, of which I’m the founder and CEO.  At first, we were more of a garage band working for tips, than we were a company.  We’ve been accused, god forbid, of being socialists. We’ve been accused of ruining the fledgling for-pay WiFi industry in Austin.  And we’ve been accused of complicating free WiFi by requiring everyone to create an account and log-in.  In our first year of business, we earned nothing, we spent our own money and we put in a lot time.  In 2004, our second year, we spent more money and earned a whopping $134.87.  Anyone who said that we were a garage band working for tips was clearly over-estimating our ability to earn money!  Even socialists are better funded.  The real cost was borne personally by each team member who gave up the opportunity and compensation to work someplace else. To work at Less Networks, you more or less have to drink the Kool-Ade and you have to pay for it out of your own pocket because we can’t afford to give it to you.  Larry Ketcham and Lennie Myers worked for at least a couple years each, without in dime in payment or even an agreement or promise of compensation for their efforts.  As a first-time CEO, I recognized that that kind of loyalty and dedication cannot be bought in a dot-commish industry characterized by stock options, quick cash-outs, and seemingly lavish spending.  I’m proud to say they have both been offered and accepted partnerships in our impoverished WiFi enterprise.  There is something else that I”m proud of.  Even though, we couldn’t afford to pay our partners, from the beginning, we figured out a way to provide health insurance.  And it is my understanding, that Humana took our case to the very top before they made the first exception in their corporate history to allow a company without a payroll to extend healthcare benefits to its sweat equity employees.  I didn’t realize at the time exactly what I was asking Humana to consider.  I knew it was important to my team, but apparently, it’s become quite a hot topic for lots of folks.

In a community of leaders like Austin, it feels a bit strange to be presented with a leadership award when we all know that we’re more or less sitting on a Lazy Susan of Leadership.  Quite frankly, the decision to lead, more often than not, seems like a bunch of leaders sitting in a room saying, “Uh, not me.  I did it last time.  What about you?”  So at least in Austin, the obligation and privilege to lead is a shared responsibility among equally capable leaders.  I’m grateful for being given the opportunity to step up and to enjoy the support and friendship of so many leaders equally deserving of this award.  So anyway, I should have had the presence of mind to say at least some of this stuff last night when others could have heard your names and heard how you all played an important role in the story.  On behalf of all of you on this list, one day too late, I accept the award with your thanks.  I know this was a long note, but as my friend Douglas Plummer said, “A thank you can never be too long.”

–r

New Loopt App Helps You With Random Hookups … Now

Wednesday, October 21st, 2009

Loopt Mix

Loopt Mix

New Loopt App Helps You With Random Hookups … Now

BY Chris DannenTue Oct 20, 2009 at 2:12 PM

The iPhone has been a dating tool for a while, but Loopt’s putting their technology to more… immediate uses with a new app called Loopt Mix. Warning: Finding love the Loopt way may involves waking at 7 a.m. in a strange bed, pulling on last night’s clothes and taking the proverbial walk of shame.

Read more…

via FastCompany

Chyngle and Billing Revolution on the Move

Thursday, October 15th, 2009
Chyngle: Mobile Venue Networks

Chyngle: Mobile Venue Networks

In September, we witnessed Chyngle‘s DemoPit winning pitch at TechCrunch50 and were impressed with their efforts to socially-mobilize and monetize the hyper-local venue.  They’ve decided to focus on stadiums.   We kinda like the idea of ordering junk from our seats–very convenient!  Would be nice if we could figure out a way to text the loud-mouth jerk behind us and ask him to shut up and sit down.

In August, we ran into Billing Revolution at the VC Task Force event “Mobile Monetization: Real Cash or Virtual Bucks.”  Other panelists were Hill Ferguson, VP Product Zong ; John Loschky, VP Product, Billing Revolution; Russell Tillitt, CEO, Embee Mobile; Fabio Sisinni, Director, Go to Market Mobile. Paypal.  We were very impressed with the quality of this panel–probably one of the best-qualified panels we’ve seen in a while.  Indeed, a very smart bunch of guys.  Hats off to VC Task Force.  Billing Revolution is trying to make a go of mobile billing by by-passing the carriers and keeping the money.  Unfortunately, this requires consumers to set up an account with them in advance.  PayPal obviously fought the same battle years before, but had a first move advantage.  Some would argue that it was a first move disadvantage.  Whatever the case, it seems that PayPal’s requirement to create an account is still a point of friction for many consumers and merchants.  It will be interesting to see how and if Billing Revolution can avoid these pitfalls.  Can’t really remember what Embee and Zong are up to, but that Russell Tillitt sure seemed smart.

It seems Chyngle and Billing Revolution made an appearance this month at the CTIA FundFest where they pitched a panel of 3 judges.  The judges picked Chyngle with Billing Revolution not quite snagging 2nd place.  Read Mike Demler‘s coverage of the contest here.

Texas Wireless Summit — Austin November 5, 2009

Thursday, October 15th, 2009
Texas Wireless Summit

Texas Wireless Summit

[If you decide to attend this event, please send me a note and we'll be sure to put you on the VIP list for an invitation-only reception -- rich at lessnetworks dot com]

The Austin Wireless Alliance and UT’s Wireless Networking and Communications Group (WNCG) invite you to attend the seventh annual Texas Wireless Summit (www.twsummit.com) on November 5th at the AT&T Conference Center in Austin, TX.  The Summit is the premiere wireless event in the central US and routinely attracts C-level participants and speakers from many of the industries leading companies.  This year’s theme is “Data Everywhere: Wireless throughout industry, government and society.”  There is a relentless expansion of wireless data networks which is allowing new industries to adopt wireless technologies.  These industries will deploy new data-driven solutions in smart grid, healthcare, telematics, consumer electronics, and software applications, resulting in unforeseen innovations.  There will be deep dives into understanding which wireless technologies are appropriate for which applications, security, and infrastructure and application deployment and management.

SPEAKERS

*********We are announcing the addition of John Stupka, President STS; Chief of Staff for the President and CEO of AT&T Mobility as the Infrastructure Keynote*********

The keynote speakers include

  • Security                        Thomas Cellucci, Chief Commercialization Officer, Department of Homeland Security
  • Infrastructure                 John Stupka, President STS; Chief of Staff for President and CEO of AT&T Mobility, Ralph de la Vega
  • Data Economics            Frank Bernhard, Managing Principal, Telecommunications Practice, Omni Group

Panel speakers from AT&T, Motion Computing, Austin Energy, Austin Heart Hospital, Dell, Motive, Movera, VMWare and many other leading industry players will provide a deeper dive into the implications for security, infrastructure and application deployment and management, and which wireless technologies are best for which applications.

REGISTRATION

Early bird registration will end October 31st.  To register, go to http://www.twsummit.com/index.php/registration.

SPONSORS

AT&T, Qualcomm, The Austin Chamber of Commerce, The City of Austin, UK Trade & Investment, ATI Wireless, C Faulkner Engineering, Tengo Networks

MEDIA PARTNERS

Portner Novelli, RCR Wireless, MobileMonday, Wi-Fi Alliance, CommNexus, WCA

For sponsorship opportunities, please contact Bart Bohn, Texas Wireless Summit Chair at bbohn@ati.utexas.edu.  For media inquiries, please contact Laura Benold at lbenold@ati.utexas.edu.

Thank you,

Bart Bohn

Austin Technology Incubator

Director, Wireless and IT Incubators

The University of Texas at Austin

www.ati.utexas.edu

Austin Wireless Alliance

Executive Director

www.austinwirelessalliance.org

Office – 512 305 0046

Mobile – 832 524 3908

bbohn@ati.utexas.edu

@bartbohn

Everything Android

Monday, October 12th, 2009

SF Mobile and Orange Labs teamed up for another great event last month–Everything Android.

Speakers included: Erick Tseng (Google), Olivier Ricordel (Qipit), Sean Galligan (Flurry), Brett Butterfield (Pixelpipe), and Mary Ann Cotter (Cooking Capsules), Tom Conrad (Pandora), Bhasker Roy (Qik) and Mark Hamblin (Touch Revolution).

There was talk of Google’s work on text to speech, but we saw a demo for something more exciting in Google’s quick search box. This feature scans everything on your “phonetop” and web search history. They call it speed dialing for life. It reminds me of Mac’s desktop spotlight, and appears to be an emerging trend in the phonetop experience.

Android was showcased as having applications that go well beyond phones. For instance, the development community at large has been looking at Android applications in automotive and elsewhere. Touch Revolution, one of the evenings presenters gave us a few examples of this, showing and telling about tablet based applications that appear to be in healthy demand.

Qipit demoed is a big idea, mobile copies. I realize that this might sound weird, possibly even useless, but trust me. This is a cool app. The 4 minute presentation limit wasn’t, in my opinion, enough time for Qpit to give its product a proper demonstration.  Fortunately, I am familiar with them, having seen them present at another recent event. I actually wondered if Android wasn’t as over-the-top exciting for Qpit, as it seemed to be for other presenters.

The Flurry demo was one of the evenings most interesting points. The service is  a mobile apps analytics that enables tracking of user navigation within apps. It supports multiple platforms and boasts an easy setup 5-30 minutes. Flurry sees great user engagement within Android apps, speaking to the stickiness of some mobile apps.

As Butterfield presented PixelPipe, a platform that enables users to populate and update any social network from any device that uploads photos, I was left wanting to hear more. This app was also victim to condensed 4-minute presentation time. It looks cool and allows users to make geo-relevant posts.

Cooking Capsules (recipient of accolades from Wired and Time), showed us that cooking can be turned into a mobile app. They don’t have many recipes yet, but are looking to showcase sponsored recipes. Should be interesting to watch their endeavors into creating revenue.

Pandora was one of the evenings highlights. Conrad entertained us with Pandora’s venture into Android, and confessed that he’d received death threats from Android enthusiasts who have been eagerly awaiting Pandora’s arrival. (Crazy Android people.) We also heard about his experience working with Verizon. Can you say odyssey?

Touch Revolution finished things off with a presentation on everything Adroid that’s not a phone. This company creates and white labels touch screen devices. Interestingly, the founder comes from the Apple touch technology team. When asked if his company found their space limited by Apple’s patents on touch technology, Hamblin informed us that he was involved in the creation of those patents, and that no, it wasn’t an issue for his company. For Touch Revolution, important factors with Android are that it’s seen as a great touch platform, it’s customizable, it’s build for cloud computing and it’s free!

So what did I learn about the significance and importance of Android? It offers multi device support, the Android marketplace offers a new market channel, and it has developed momentum on cell phones and tablets. I wonder if it might also appear much more exciting for new developers, as the iPhone app store has become immensely overcrowded, so much so that it’s now being seen as a source of little more than beer money for many developers. Maybe Android will save some mobile app garage developers from having to hang on those pesky day jobs. To Apple’s credit, it would appear that they are trying to create new ways for developers to make money, as noted in this WSJ blog post.

Less Networks holds strong interest in the Android landscape, as 3G traffic continues to flourish and grow.

~r

Free Food, Free WiFi

Monday, August 17th, 2009

After years of providing free WiFi to the masses, we love going to the Texas Restaurant Association (TRA) Soutwest Food Expo because we get free food.  The expo is a perfect trade show for us because it helps us meet partners and prospects in our target market.

Toss the ingredients of Smart WiFi into the Crazy Chef's mouth

Toss the ingredients of Smart WiFi into the Crazy Chef's mouth

This year’s booth was designed by our newest team member, John Toole.  The concept was to pitch the ingredients of Smart WiFi to prospects as they pitched bean bags into the Crazy Chef’s mouth.  It’s amazing how popular this corny carnie concept was and how successful it was in producing leads.  This year, we met Joe Aguilar of Bullrito’s and were delighted to discover that Smart WiFi  is a great fit for their WiFi and social marketing needs.  We were also delighted to see the booth of our channel partner, Time Warner Business Class.  Their’s wasn’t as fun as ours!