New Trends in Mobile Web Access (original) (raw)
New Trends in Mobile Web Access - Welcome and Overview
Welcome
- Take away message: A lot of new developments in Mobile Web Access
- Schedule
- 14:00-14:30: Welcome, Overview- Philipp Hoschka, W3C
- 14:30-15:00: Innovations in Mobile Web Clients - Charles McCathieNevile, Opera
- 15:00-15:30: Embracing Device Diversity - Kirk Tang, MobileAware
- 15:30-16:00: Break
- 16:00-16:30: Best Practices for Mobile Web content - Philipp Hoschka, W3C
- 16:30-17:00: Building Mobile Applications with SVG Tiny - Dean Jackson, W3C
- 17:00-17:30: Wrap-up - What the future holds for the mobile Web - Panel
Overview
- What is W3C?
- What is the potential for mobile Web access?
- What has changed since the WAP 1.0 days?
- What is W3C's Mobile Web Initiative?
- Perspectives
What is W3C ?
- Founded by Tim Berners-Lee, Web Inventor
- Mission: Lead the Web to its Full Potential
- Industry consortium
- Over 400 members (3, Alcatel, AT&T, BT Labs, DaimlerChrysler, Ericsson, France Telecom, HP, IBM, Intel, Microsoft, Nokia, SAP, Siemens, TIM, T-Mobile, Vodafone,..)
Overview
- What is W3C?
- What is the potential for mobile Web access?
- What has changed since the WAP 1.0 days?
- What is W3C's Mobile Web Initiative?
- Perspectives
Active Users Increasing, Strong Revenue Generation Despite Price Erosion
A significant proportion of subscribers have terminals enabled for browsing. The active user population is rapidly growing, and despite the downward pressure on prices, mobile browsing is a strong revenue generator.
Source: W3C-MWI/Nokia
Mobile Web in Developing Countries
The Mobile Web can accelerate Internet access around the world by solving the "last kilometer" problem
- Commerce, healthcare, education, eGov, communication ... [ex: Der Spiegel]
- 61% of the BBC's international Wap users came from Nigeria (BBC, Aug 2006)
- W3C Workshop on the Mobile Web in Developing Countries, Dec 2006, Bangalore
Overview
- What is W3C?
- What is the potential for mobile Web access?
- What has changed since the WAP 1.0 days?
- What is W3C's Mobile Web Initiative?
- Perspectives
Web has become Mass Medium
- on par with TV: 14 hours a week online (JupiterResearch, Jan 2006, US market)
- huge potential for mobile Web access
Mobile Web: Growing Use
- T-Mobile Web'n'Walk:
- 330 page views per month per user
- 199% increase in data ARPU (Average Revenue Per User - excl. SMS)
- Source: Opera, April 2006
- BBC
- BBC: Number of requests to mobile content doubled in 2005
- Approaching 250 million for the year (from 50K in 2001)
- 28% of mobile users *only* accessed BBC content from mobile phone, not PC
- Source: BBC, November 2005
- Web/info access generates $2.7 billion of data revenue (32%) (Source: CTIA Semi-Annual Wireless Survey)
- "Mobile browsing becoming mainstream", Ipsos study/news.com
- ...
Overview
- What is W3C?
- What is the potential for mobile Web access?
- What has changed since the WAP 1.0 days?
- What is W3C's Mobile Web Initiative?
- Perspectives
Who's Involved?
19 Sponsors
- WG Participants: AOL, France Telecom, Google, Microsoft, mTLD, Nokia, NTT DoCoMo, Opera, T-Online, Telefonica, Vodafone, ...
Sponsor Benefits
- Participate in MWI Leadership through MWI Steering Council
- Participate in Marketing and Outreach
- Press release on joinining
- Testimonials
- MWI Sponsor logo
- MWI speaking opportunities (MWI seminars, talks)
- MWI publications (brochure)
- MWI Tradeshow appearances (3GSM, ...)
Current Work Items
- Mobile Web Best Practices (see later Talk)
- "MobileOK" Trustmark
- Device Description
- Improve access to device description information
- Standard API to Device Description Repositories
Overview
- What is W3C?
- What is the potential for mobile Web access?
- What has changed since the WAP 1.0 days?
- What is W3C's Mobile Web Initiative?
- Perspectives
It's 1996 All Over Again ...
Web 1996 | Mobile Web 2006 |
---|---|
Too slow | Too slow |
Online Services | Walled Gardens |
Lack of interoperability | Lack of interoperability |
Child protection | Child protection |
Not accessible | Not accessible |
... But Some Things Easier
Web 1996 | Mobile Web 2006 |
---|---|
Web is a novelty | Web is a mass medium |
Few connected users | Many potentially-connected users |
Lack of content | Lots of potential content and developers |
No industry | Large potential industry |
Final version of slides available at
http://www.w3.org/2006/Talks/3GWorld-Asia-Intro/Overview.html