Archive for the 'Fon11' Category

Fon11 discussion on Jeremiah Owyang’s blog

Jeremiah wrote “Fon11 is a vendor planning on creating a social network for iPhone users. But why limit this to a particular phone type? Why not extend this to all mobile devices.” 

Here is our reply on this blog:

Joshua, you’re right. iPhone is only our reference platform. Our strategy is to release a library of REST APIs for both Fon11 and OpenLandmark, and a development sand box. This is coming soon.

There are so many phones, and the platforms are very fragmented. We can easily modify the current mobile Web code to support other WebKit browsers. However, BlackBerry and Windows Mobile will require some rewrites. Phones without a full browser will require rich clients (local apps). It’s impossible for us to target so many platforms. Therefore, our strategy is to partner with independent developers to spread the network. 

Jeremiah, thanks for raising the question. I also agree with the fatigue observation. Our goal is not to create another network, but to participate in existing networks. To put it in another way, we want to bring location-based services (LBS) and crowd computing (social network) to the applications we use everyday.

You can follow the active discussion on Jeremiah’s blog here.

Fortune wrote about TechCrunch post

Here is a “must-read” Fortune follow up to TechCrunch post “describing the promise of an iPhone-only social network — one that, among other things, could tell you where your friends are and what they’re up to at any time — hits a topic that a Swedish ex-pat named Peter S. Magnusson nailed back on July 1, 2007, three days after the iPhone was released.

Check it out here

This is really hilarious

The screen is doctored, but it’s hilarious by Brandon Miles

iPhoneSocialThis article at TechCrunch poses the question, “Will there every be a (successful) iPhone-only social network?” They outline a Berkeley startup called Fon11which is working on just that.From the article: “iPhone owners, like users of most Apple products, are a fairly passionate, elitist group of people. I think an iPhone-only social network, if it had the right features, would be a huge hit with these users. Actually, I think any mobile social network would be a big hit, if it had presence awareness and was able to tell you both where your friends are and what they are up to. And also let you meet new people around you who were open to it.”What is kind of cool (and kind of scary) is that it seems they are trying to use the iPhone’s “Locate Me” technology to show you where your “friends” are in relation to your location. Have a friend who never tells you when they’re coming to town? If you are both a part of this network, you can be alerted when they show up. Get your landlord on here, and you’ll know when to turn the lights off and pretend your at work.

TechCrunch wrote us up, usage surged



Will There Be A (Successful) iPhone-Only Social Network?

Michael Arrington

147 comments »

iPhone owners, like users of most Apple products, are a fairly passionate, elitist group of people.I think an iPhone-only social network, if it had the right features, would be a huge hit with these users. Actually, I think any mobile social network would be a big hit, if it had presence awareness and was able to tell you both where your friends are and what they are up to. And also let you meet new people around you who were open to it.I wrote about some of the early experiments with mobile social networks last September (see our more recent coverage of LimeJuice as well). The big social networks, of course, aren’t ignoring mobile, either. But even Facebook’s iPhone app is just the desktop version optimized for that phone. It doesn’t leverage the device itself to tell you when friends are close.The goal here isn’t just to let users see where their friends are and what they are up to. The killer app is to facilitate meeting new people - either for dating (see a picture of everyone around you who’s single and looking, along with their basic bio), or business (see the professional bio and picture of everyone at the cocktail party). Subject to privacy controls, of course.Once a network has critical mass users will, depending on privacy settings, be able to walk into any gathering and see information on the people in the room. Whoever gets there first will have a far more valuable asset than the existing networks at MySpace and Facebook today. Social networks are about being social. And social implies being around other people. The device they have with them when they’re doing that, and which can enhance those social gatherings, is their mobile phone. The key to doing that is through GPS or cell phone triangulation (which the iPhone now has).None of the mobile social networks we’ve covered have even come close to establishing a critical mass. The key to winning is getting users on devices that have GPS or triangulation for presence and location, and having software on the phone instead of just accessing it from a website. Getting java apps on phones in Europe is much easier than in the U.S., which is why most of the mobile social network startups are located there.The iPhone, though, has both. Or rather, soon will have both (the SDK to allow third party apps on the phone may have been delayed). As soon as that SDK is released, look for a flurry of third party applications to try and create a social network on the iPhone.The front runners will be Facebook and MySpace, who, I assume, will get their users to install software on the phone as quickly as possible and try to add location information for users who choose to share it.But new startups will try as well. And one way to differentiate themselves may be to offer a social network that is open only to iPhone users, and no one else. The exclusivity factor may be exactly what will draw enough iPhone users to kick start the service.Fon11 - Giving It A ShotBerkeley-based Fon11 is one startup that we’re tracking that plans to do this. The service works already through the web browser on the iPhone. In fact, you have to use it from an iPhone - it’s the only way you can register for an account, add friends or do anything else. The website, when accessed from any where but an iPhone, just shows information about the service (note - that isn’t entirely true - you can go to testiphone.com and enter fon11.com/home and see it just like it would appear on the iPhone - but only from the Safari browser).The service is fairly limited right now to setting presence/status information. They can’t use the iPhone triangulation feature, so they set up a separate service called OpenLandmark to let people set their location information (it works well for places you visit frequently). The service caught the eye of the iPhone team, who made it a Staff Pick earlier this month.Blackberry has a true GPS and allows third party apps on their phone. And Google’s Android will also do all of this as well. But something tells me that iPhone users might be the first group of people to jump on mobile social networks, and wouldn’t mind letting other iPhone users in the room know they’re part of the cult.

 

Introducing Fon11 “A Live Phonebook”

Think about the last time you changed your mobile phone.  How long did it take you to re-key your contact list? How did you inform your friends and contacts that you had a new work, home or mobile number?  Now, all you need is Fon11 and you can simply update your phone number in your settings.  Fon11 will take care of the rest and update your contacts’ phonebooks.

We aim to make the phonebook alive. Share your availability, what you are doing, your mood, and your location with your contacts via the phonebook. Locate your friends and landmarks nearby.

Our team has worked long and hard and we’re excited to roll out Fon11. This is just the beginning. Fon11 is a work in progress, and we intend to add a lot of other cool features. For example, the API release is coming very soon, which we hope will attract other developers to create versions of Fon11 for other mobile devices.

We hope you enjoy using Fon11. If you have ideas, or find bugs in Fon11, we hope you’ll take a moment to send us feedback.