Celio RedFly in Action
November 7, 2009 – 9:36 pm | Comments

A few days ago I commented about the Celio Redfly adding support for BlackBerrys. I came across that bit of information first while researching to purchase a Celio RedFly myself and then while I’ve been …

Read the full story »
Mobility Site Minute

Check out our podcast, the Mobilitysite Minute. Quick news, views, and interviews.

Mobilitysite Contests

The lastest Mobilitysite.com Contests. What can you win today?

Mobility Site Videos

Video reviews, 1st looks, and demos of the hottest mobile devices.

Mobilitysite Polls

Our polls help get our reader’s take on what’s happening in Mobility.

Mobilitysite Reviews

Mobilitysite reviews take you deep into the hottest mobile devices, software and accessories.

Home » General, Ultra Mobiles

Top Ten of Whatevers…… The Failed Future of Mobile Technology Part I

Posted by PsionAndy on June 15, 2007 – 1:34 pm
closeThis post was published 2 years 4 months 25 days ago which may make its actuality or expire date not be valid anymore. This site is not responsible for any misunderstanding.

With news stories breaking so fast on Mobilitysite it’s inevitable that sometimes  some things tend tongage get forgotten.   Combine that with the fact that there’s only so many arguments you can have about iPhones, Windows Mobile Upgrades yet another memory card format and it’s perhaps time to take a step back and look around to see what’s been going on.

So here’s the first in an occasional series, the Top Ten of Whatevers..

This week, The Top ten things that were going to be the future of  mobility. and then err weren’t. Bonus points to those ideas that were so great they sank the company.

10) Push to talk

This was great idea,,, Phones as walkie talkies.. short instant voice messages wherever you go. Now I know this is still available in the some bits of the world, but as soon as Orange had finished explaining what it was in the UK, they killed it to new customers and phased it out.

9) Wildfire

Want a complete voice activated mobile phone, that would allow you to send emails, book appointments, and do everything just by speaking to it? That was the proud boast of of Wildfire. A premier service that would give you a virtual PA on the other end of the phone. Launched in 1999 () it became very popular with the people who used it to run their lives. Despite huge advertising (shown before the phantom menace) Orange never really did seem to want people to actually use it, and when in 2005 it was withdrawn despite huge protests from wildfire fans, Orange blamed the failure on a lack of new members joining up in the last 18 months of the service.. despite the fact that they’d been preventing new members signing up since 2003

8) Linux Phones and PDAs (Yopy, Motorola, Zaurus..)

00348Now I know that this one could be controversial. Linux has a very strong fan base, and while I’m not a rabid penguin fan, I do really want it to succeed. On paper it is a winning formula like the Yopy (picture from www.gicom.de) . Take a small device, design it around an open source operating system, encourage communities to port, adapt, improve the platform, sit back and watch millions of techies buy your hardware and accessories. But it’s failed everytime someone has tried it (with the possible exception of Nokia). I had a Zaurus 5500. And I think it could do everything eventually. A colleague who knew nothing about PDAs bought an ipaq 2210 about the same time, within days he was watching DVDs, surfing the Internet and managing his calendar.. while I was still struggling with the packet management system on the Zaurus, and trying to build a local repository so I could install software. I think its still in a drawer somewhere.

7) N-Gage 

So you’re a major player in the phone industry, and you have a look to see what similar sized devices people are buying. Apple has the MP3 player business sown up, you already put cameras into your phones, you’re bored with the PDA/Smartphone thing, and then you see the Gameboy advanced. Aha (you say in Finnish) We can take them on and beat them at their own game. The N-Gage was Nokia’s attempt to to launch a mobile gaming device. It was built around the Symbian 60 platform and a taco-shaped phone handset. In the UK at least it was more expensive than the GB, had less games, required a sim card, and had buttons that felt like you were having to play games on a mobile phone. That combined with the fact that you had to hold it sideways to your head to make a call, destroyed any street-credibility crucial to this sort of handheld. Nokia seems to think that the brand name has some value, and so it is apparently planning to roll it out to its standard high end smartphones. Apart from them however, does anyone still care?

6) Dualcor

Take a Windows mobile device, phone and a Windows XP tablet, and stick them together in one very warm package. so you have a bulky PDA, and an under powered PC wherever you go, then remove the promised phone, wireless, and increase the price. can’t think why it didn’t work..

So, halfway though the countdown of despair. Have I falsely condemned something to the dustbin of history? Are there any signs of life in these dead horses? Do you want to take a guess as to what may be in part I?

Post to Twitter Post to Yahoo Buzz Post to Digg Post to Facebook

PsionAndy (139 Posts) - Website | Twitter | Facebook





You can also participate in other conversation in our active forums with 200,000 other Members. It only takes 2 minutes to sign up one time for free in the forums.
blog comments powered by Disqus