The first EU version of eComm was not as large as the California event, but equally worth it. Below the photo is a copy of my notes (i.e. my warmed over Twitter stream) followed by a copy of the schedule. I don't know if this is of much value to you, but like many things in the blog, it's a convenient way for me to keep notes on things I'm interested in. :)
There's a copy of my presentation on SlideShare. My photos are here.
Monday, 26-Oct-098:29 AM Getting organized to leave for eComm Europe 2009 in Amsterdam, http://bit.ly/TL45Q. Plan to write my notes live on Tweeter!
Wednesday, 28-Oct-09
8:39 AM Amazing - a European event that actually started at 8:30am, and there are perhaps 100 people here already with more coming in...
8:42 AM Lee Dryburgh's giving global telecom vision, but no practical issues like conf tags and Wi-Fi codes. Assumes smart folks!
8:48 AM Martin Geddes - Goodbye minutes - Hello moments. Voice & SMS revenues have peaked, now declining - but there are new opty's.
8:50 AM Martin Geddes - Describes how biz to consumer messaging could work better (& gen revenues for operator).
9:04 AM Geddes - Better Vmail: Editting APIs; HD Audio; Pers Interactions; Smarter Container; Multimedia.
9:05 AM Geddes - Integrating comm to reduce friction, e.g. Ribbit adding voice to Google Wave.
9:07 AM Geddes - Telco platform needs to provide 3 steps: connect (many ways); interact & transact (e.g. collect on enterprise behalf)
9:10 AM Geddes - Who will profit fr platform? Telcos? Salesforce+Google+Facebook? or Someone new?
9:11 AM Geddes - New Platform needed to manage complexity - Martin's focus, so far, has been Biz Process improvement
9:13 AM Geddes: Comm Stages have been: Messages, Minutes, MBs, Media, but what we need next are "Moments"
9:16 AM Geddes - 1st Q from Audience is about customer privacy. Martin thinks operators are trusted and can manage to remain trusted.
9:17 AM Geddes responds to Q about transition: Will be messy.
9:19 AM Geddes responding to Q: Are Ops really trusted or just tolerated? A: Trusted, could blow it, but generally optimistic.
9:20 AM Geddes responding to Q about moments: Moments of experience more important than moments of efficiency
9:22 AM Geddes responding to Q from Martyn Davis about regulation. A: Google exists, it can be done.
9:23 AM Bob Frankston - Need to move beyond telecom & network neutrality -- To Ambient Connectivity - where you can assume you're connected.
9:25 AM Frankston: Endpoint ID; Routing ID; independent of IP addr, Operator, anyone else - networking independent of any network
9:27 AM Frankston - rediscover the Internet, i.e. rediscover End-to-End. Some tastes - Subscriptions decouple some apps from the path
9:28 AM Frankston points out China now has ambient electricity, i.e. universal sockets that accept any international plug.
9:30 AM Frankston: Opportunities - no dependence on subscriptions, no per-pipe billing - who will provide the bit commons? What is he asking for?
9:31 AM Frankston: Talks about running our own wires, but also seeks access to common infrastructure. Networks versus networking...
9:34 AM Frankston: Internet is an experiment in economics. It's about the apps - those are the end points. Opty to rethink everything now.
9:36 AM Frankston ""Broadband"" is the lamp post model (look for keys where light is)
9:37 AM Frankston: Shift funding to infrastructure; ran out of time...
9:39 AM Frankston: responding to Q about port 80 - people use it because it works, not because they are doing client-server.
9:41 AM James Enck works for special situations capital company - opens with comments on current financial stress - amusing slides!
9:45 AM Enck: Recovery will not be to what was, but something new. US deficit far more than Obama is saying. Some EU countries there today
9:47 AM Enck is giving an amazing depressing view of our future! EU-centric, but applies world wide. I hope he has something to suggest.
9:52 AM Enck says telecom industry not as important as other global issues. But finally, he admits he's being flippant. Promising views?
9:54 AM Enck's telecom industry wish list: Awareness, Engagement, Investment, Reorientation - i.e. with future global needs.
9:55 AM Enck responding to Q about protecting Moore's law from government regulation - didn't get a simple answer...
9:57 AM Enck responding to Q: will telcos die or change? A: Not very optimistic.
10:03 AM Morten Hjerde: Phone Paradigm Shift - extended introduction to what paradigms are, using computer analogies.
10:09 AM Hjerde: Shows augmented reality browser (on your mobile device).
10:10 AM Hjerde: Communications as a medium, i.e. a stream of information, is something that translates to mobiles.
10:12 AM Hjerde: Most people still view mobile device as just phone. Paradigm shift will be to phone as medium & a life repository.
10:13 AM Hjerde: Smartphone users have made the transition - pick up phone to do other things (other than voice call). But devices are diff.
10:17 AM Julien Salanave from IDATE - Telecoms in EU in 2015. Has optimistic view of EU: EU good on fixed Broadband and now mobile BB.
10:19 AM Salanave: France using VoIP (i.e. FT); Dutch operators outsourcing their networks; Openreach, etc. - examples of EU innovation.
10:24 AM Salanave: 6 uncertainties: 1-silos, fragmented comms. 2-UltraBB availability. 3-New verticals? 4-Content optimization 5-open devices
10:25 AM Salanave: 6-open connectivity or bundles?
10:27 AM Salanave: Four possibilities... 1- Silent death. Most likely with public bailouts in some countries.
10:27 AM Salanave: #2 Market Shakeout - e.g. operators structurally separated with mix and match model for app providers
10:28 AM Salanave: #3 - Clash of the Giants - Telcos vs. Internet giants, but giants on top
10:29 AM Salanave: #4 Generative Bazaar - probably requires public infrastructure or net coops, i.e. connectivity, nothing more.
10:30 AM Salanave: DIY connectivity? Thinks we need a professional organizer but advocates Net coop.
10:31 AM Salanave: Has an argument there will be more revenue from generative bazaar... Not clear what that argument is. ??
12:09 PM - the pause in my coverage was the result of having to give my PC to the A/V crew before I spoke. I'm back in audience now.
12:21 PM Pictures are going up here: http://bit.ly/3LiFAn
12:30 PM Moray Rumney, Agilent - LTE started with a clean sheet. Constraints: spectrum, bps/Hz, # of cells
12:31 PM Rumney: Most wireless capacity gains have been due to more cell sites.
12:32 PM Rumney: Peak rates going up much more rapidly than average for optimum cell capacity - will be 90x with LTE. Ads for peak are bad!
12:34 PM Rumney: 3G/4G problem 19 frequency bands
12:35 PM Rumney: LTE Rel-8 won't actually work much better than HSPA+ in commercial deployments.
12:36 PM Rumney: Worried about single frequency intercell interference and OFDM. Also, MIMO for Wi-Fi but maybe not in cellular...
12:39 PM Rumney: Mobile broadband dilema - won't get the capacity people expect with current LTE path. Linear increase for exponential problem
12:41 PM Rumney: LTE must watch out for Wi-Fi ! Great follow up for my talk !
2:15 PM Norman Lewis describing and promoting vlume.com - promoting user control of mobile services by web aggregation of people.
3:13 PM Alexandra Deschamps-Sonsino: CEO of tinker.it - arduino.cc makezine.com1
3:17 PM Deschamps-Sonsino: the Internet of Things - I am my devices - making those smarter - non-verbal communication via contextual info
3:18 PM Alexandra Deschamps-Sonsino: CEO of tinker.it - arduino.cc makezine.com1
3:20 PM Deschamps-Sonsino: arduino.cc over 100K sold - cheap easy way to prototype w/RFID, Bluetooth, Xbee, Wi-Fi, Ethernet, GPS
3:22 PM Deschamps-Sonsino: Examples: device tweets when unborn baby kicks; RFID detects when cat is in the house; Kill-a-watt home power mon
3:24 PM Deschamps-Sonsino: New product possibilities: Guardian Twat race; Rewind; Centograph
4:06 PM Claire Boonstra co-founder of Layar is describing their augmented reality mobile application
4:10 PM Boonstra: Layar uses GPS/cell-ID, camera and data including 3rd party data via open API. 3rd parties develop layers!
4:37 PM Mark Rolston of frog design: more augmented reality plus user interactivity via the device watching what the user is doing.
4:40 PM Rolston: Discussion of Microsoft Natal project
4:43 PM Rolston: showing phone keyboard projected onto your hand and a person dialing, i.e. the MIT example I've already seen.
4:45 PM Rolston: The problem with computing is it requires computers. Frog design working to make it seamless. New affordances.
4:57 PM Peter Kaptein& Valerie ?, RoomWare - software to use mobile as remote control - demo just finished this weekend... setup probs...
5:00 PM Kaptein: Connecting people places and things - more than remote control, it knows where you are & what's possible - e.g. order lunch!
5:02 PM Peter Kaptein: The following are in same space, but different (complementary?): pachube, layar & roomware
5:07 PM Peter Kaptein: demo not working... good attempt to fill and/or recover, but demo still broken - finally 4 precious minutes gone...
5:08 PM Peter Kaptein: voice call; IVR response, then DTMF keys become remote control direction keys: 1 upper left, 2 up, 6 right 8 down, etc.
5:10 PM Peter Kaptein: Repeat demo with an Android, Now get data menu on scrren - using it to control the slides. More clear than IVR.
5:11 PM Peter Kaptein: Now we're seeing a good demo! I wonder how much the IVR approach will be used. Data approach so much better.
5:12 PM Peter Kaptein: They use Voxeo for the IVR part and gave Voxeo a pitch (as a supporter of the conference!).
5:18 PM Gerd Leonhard, MediaFuturist.com - Futurist - develops scenarios for clients for next 2-3 years and next 5 years.
5:25 PM Leonhard: Recent events - Social media passes email. video streaming (youtube) passes P2P. Ref to STL's 2-sided markets.
5:30 PM Leonhard: I've heard his points before, e.g. Music by itself has no value, the value is around it. Bundle + + +. Freemium models.
5:32 PM - to many back channels. Can deal with Google Wave right now (and it's not widely public yet). Certainly can't cope with IRC.
Thursday, 29-Oct-09
9:07 AM Jaap van Till, HAN University, NL gives outline of cooperative actions starting with a reference to Ostrom's Noble prize."
9:09 AM James Body, Telenet Research (formerly Truphone) is now working on what can be done to fill in gaps in GSM coverage."
9:33 AM Bob Sweeney, VoiceSage - focus on communications enabled business processes... Value metric is customer contacts missed."
9:38 AM My presentation from yesterday is up on SlideShare if your are interested http://bit.ly/2JWo3Z
9:39 AM @kerryritz http://bit.ly/2JWo3Z
9:43 AM Sean Park, Nauiokas Park, formerly a banker (<2006) now advisor on financial markets and platforms"
9:46 AM Park: Extends Carlota Perez to 6th paradigm which he projects will be ""Cloud Computing"" - Everything as a service.
10:03 AM Park: His website is http://nauiokaspark.com/#/home
10:06 AM Park: Advocating open APIs in banking as opposed to bank's current practice of black box closed systems.
10:19 AM Michael Jackson, Mangrove Capital, is giving a good (but very general) presentation on disruption.
10:23 AM Jackson claims biggest disruptive driver is telcos be pushed to their rightful place - as providers of tubes for the Internet.
10:33 AM James Burke, VURB, studies computing in cities - many things under rubric of Intelligent City. Augmented reality, co-working, ...
10:34 AM Burke: 100kgarages.com supports homebrew manufacturing (via outsourcing?)
10:36 AM Burke: Tons of interesting examples: Barcamps and other ""camps""; sensors networks & twitter; find your friends; recylcing; ...
11:20 AM RJ Auburn, CTO of Voxeo is talking about text, not voice! Kids don't talk on the phone, they text or IM. So the future is text.
11:39 AM David ""Lefty"" Schlesinger, LiMo Foundation asks audience # under 35? ~25% hands up. Wow. Lefty started w/computers 35 yrs ago.
11:54 AM Schlesinger: iPhone exposes problems with our assumptions, but is not indicative of what's coming next (can't even guess!)
11:57 AM Moshe Yudkowsky, Disaggregate - ""practical is a relative term"" as a lead in for a discussion of the status of speech technology
12:08 PM Yudkowsky: Good survey of speech technology. I liked his comments on data mining recorded speech.
12:14 PM Jay Phillips, creator of Adhearsion, now part of Voxeo - speaking on open source software - 1st post-scarcity economy
12:20 PM Phillips: Goal is to get ""crazy efficient"" at producing a class of applications. His lead-in to open source development tools.
12:25 PM Phillips: Java is back and here to stay, i.e. SIPMethod, Mobicents, Sailfin
12:28 PM Phillips: UniMRCP - general purpose media server!
12:35 PM Jan Linden, Global IP Solutions is on stage now, but having presentation problems...
12:39 PM Linden: Still no sound, but good video examples. Clear benefit of H.264 SVC. Description of what H.264 & SVC are.
12:50 PM Dean Bubley of Disruptive Analysis comes on stage to talk about LTE's problems providing either voice or SMS.
1:01 PM Bubley: LTE Voice - Circuit-switched fallback is so bad it looks like it was designed to force mobile operators to adopt IMS.
2:26 PM A panel discussion is getting underway: Investing in the Telecom Value Chain for a Post-Meltdown World - Moderator Introduction
2:36 PM Telecom Value Chain: James Enck (mCAPITAL), Sean Park (Nauiokas Park), Hjalmar Winbladh (Rebtel), Michael Jackson (Mangrove Capital)
2:54 PM Sean does an interesting bit on weather derivatives and frictionless brokering of weather insurance using a new Internet-based sys.
2:56 PM Jackson has good point that he doesn't buy stuff on-line in Denmark because in many cases there is no way to pay, e.g. US videos.
2:57 PM Winbladh makes the point that stores sell prepaid cards, but you can't buy Skype credits without a credit card - a big gap.
2:58 PM Panel bitching about how Telco's have a micropayment platform but have never figured out how to make them available to 3rd parties.
3:10 PM Martin Geddes talking about 2-sided markets - Covering similar material as last spring: http://blip.tv/file/1839328/1
3:16 PM Martin Geddes now on the transition from IT Svcs to Cloud Svcs. Money will be in aggregating services (definitely not infrastructure)
4:09 PM Sten Tamkivi, GM Skype Estonia - Why Skype's success? Intimate (i.e. HD/video) & free plus International LD (i.e. pays for Skype)
4:12 PM Tamkivi: 33% of Skype calls now include video; ILD volume +13% retail price -7% wholesale -4% fo rnet +4%, increasingly going mobile
4:15 PM Tamkivi: 500M minutes US-Mexico = leading calling corridor, 37% in top 30 corridors and then very, very long tail.
4:18 PM Tamkivi: US 46% video; China 24% video // US 5% IM; China 24% IM // Dev Mkt to Emerging Mkt is highest usage // Dev-Dev is 2nd
4:23 PM Tamkivi: Long talk of Dev countries wanting video while emerging mkts want IM, SMS, cheap voice - seems obvious - why dwell so long?
4:26 PM Tamkivi: 100K hours of Skype-Skype per hour; 33K hours of video calls; 12K hours of calls to landlines and mobiles (PSTN).
4:27 PM Tamkivi: Q about SIP - A: won't fix want's not broken, thus addressing interop but not worrying about stuff that works. Well stated.
4:28 PM Tamkivi: When original design was done (in 2001-2002) we couldn't have made a system that ""just worked"" using SIP - won't chg now.
4:31 PM Tamkivi: Answering Q about adding money xfer capability - experimented w/Paypal. Problems with per-countries regulation.
4:34 PM Tamkivi: Q: Will you add social networking? A: Skype is a social network already - may expose more & integrate (as did w/MySpace).
4:36 PM Tamkivi: Q about retaining P2P svc when groups become isolated. A: a bit ambiguous - always reviewing on case-by-case basis.
4:38 PM Tim Panton, PhoneFromHere.com talking about deploying SILK codec. They embed voice into websites. SILK 1st true VoIP codec vs PSTN c.
4:41 PM Panton: 1st use at gamers site. Need rich (HD) comms - using max quality level w/16 KHz sampling at half the uLaw rate
4:44 PM Panton: 2nd case is language lessions - less CPU than gamers & variable BW - quality important. So 8 KHz samples & variable rate.
4:45 PM Panton: 2nd case benefits from having network stats to feedback to codec. Getting that feedback through Asterisk was a lot of work.
4:46 PM Panton: Summary - SILK has been most flexible and better than any alternatives they've tried
4:48 PM Panton: Rspd'g to Q - They avoid transcoding at all. Always loading Java client with the right codec & parameters.
4:48 PM Panton: Haven't done a comparison of SILK with ILBC
4:49 PM Now Tim Panton starting again with a new presentation - new topic - Google Wave
4:56 PM Panton: giving examples of phone calls included in a Google Wave. Wave shows each snip with timestamp in the wave.
4:57 PM Panton: each segment listed in the Wave is in a separate audio file with a time stamp.
5:05 PM Dean Elwood, VoIP User, talking about Voice UI (voxygen.co.uk) - why it's important (customer sat.)
5:09 PM Rudolf van der Berg, Logica, on the future of Interconnect - won't get free voice anytime soon because stuck with EU regulation.
5:13 PM van der Berg: Exposing the problems with ""Calling Party Pays"" - nice to see suppt for stuff I've written about: http://bit.ly/37VhLN
5:16 PM van der Berg: Advocating Bill and Keep - refers to Internet peering and his article http://bit.ly/ILszq
5:20 PM Daniel Appelquist, Vodafone, on Social Web - he's in an R&D group - won't talk about 360 offer or widgets.
5:23 PM Appelquist: Net history - closed to open // Social networks are sep gardens today - will have to chg. Working on Soc Net platform
5:27 PM Appelquist: 71% of people are active in multiple social networks
5:29 PM Appelquist: Screen full of logos - we need this diversity, but... Shows 3 scenarios: Consolidation, fragmentation, Social Web
5:30 PM Appelquist: Advocates social web where users move btwn social apps and exchange data (under their control) - decentralized.
5:32 PM Appelquist: req. protocols - get slide deck for long lists of who is pushing what standards - special mention for OSLO Allicance
5:36 PM Stuart Henshall, Phweet: On twitter: #Callme, #SkypeMe, text me - @mgs are like ring, but may be delayed for days.
5:39 PM Henshall: Twitter provides ID and reputation, but needs nxt gen - TwitterTalk - Important for calls outside out budy list.
5:40 PM Henshall: Who has access to me? Proliferation of channels. Phweet Alpha dumped URL into stream - launches bridged call in browser.
5:41 PM Henshall: Problems - delayed receipt of tweets
5:43 PM Henshall: Location-based Phweet - signaling outside carrier; don't share #s; profile is Caller-ID - solution not limited to Twitter
5:48 PM Tjeerd Hoek, frog design, promises 10 observations on communication trends
5:52 PM eComm Hoek: 1) Being a great tool is pretty cool (& long lived - e.g. FAX & Morse code).
5:54 PM Hoek: 2) nailing the basics is hard - prototype and test, repeatedly.
5:56 PM Hoek: 3) Hardware is a commodity, or is it? Tech-tools as objects of desire. Examples of gorgeous devices.
5:58 PM Hoek: The phone is the next platform, or is it? - Dedicated devices with optimized HW & SW with one focus.
6:02 PM Hoek: How can we free the data people care about? share btwn user devices. Sharing and social beyond personal devices...
6:05 PM Hoek: Server-side processing and visualizations - showing models built from many individual's photos; then gapminder visualizations.
6:07 PM Hoek: Make it very easy to pay and people may pay!
6:09 PM Hoek: Be a Platform - open it up - change the world. Tjeerd Hoek is running over (& last talk of the day).
6:12 PM day is done. Tomorrow morning will have keynotes by both Sascha Meinrath and the Google Wave team.
Friday, 30-Oct-09
8:51 AM Cullen Jennings, Cisco, is up first today as Sascha Meinrath seems to be stuck in traffic.
8:54 AM Jennings is giving a survey of what's happened in telephony - nice talk, amusing anecdotes about support, but no new insights, yet.
8:56 AM Jennings: Oddly, codecs have gotten more expensive - need more variants, need wideband, need video - device cost goes up.
8:57 AM Jennings mentions distributed hash tables (as used by Skype) - looks like he loves the subject. So do I !
8:58 AM Jennings: Mentions P2PSIP groups attempt to standardize the use of Dist. Hash Tbles. (DHT). DHTs the opposite of Cloud Computing!
9:00 AM Jennings: Phone numbers - artificially scarce resource! Identifiers are valuable. Phone Nums will outlast the PSTN.
9:01 AM Jennings: Public ENUM co-op'd by carriers, turned into Infrastructure ENUM (where carriers control). Will people steal their # back?"
9:03 AM Jennings: Lack of royalty free codecs in holding back media in HTML. iLBC for narrowband, SILK or CELT for wideband, Theora video."
9:04 AM Jennings: H.264 SVC is great but we can't even figure out what the royalties will be, except they will be expensive. Go Theora!
9:06 AM Jennings: IETF may be able to make progress with royalty free codecs, se their Codec BOF codec@ietf.org"
9:11 AM Jennings: ENUM issue is who gets to make changes. Users or carriers.
9:13 AM Sascha Meinrath, New America Foundation, speaking with no slides - Works where technology & policy intersect. Educating Congress."
9:18 AM Meinrath: Amusing story about how we are too protected in the west (vs. visiting dev world). Righteous injuries! You can be an idiot.
9:20 AM Meinrath: Story includes local optimization (while climbing a cliff) that gets you into a position where you can't go up or down.
9:20 AM Meinrath: Pt of his story - We are at a critical juncture in telecom that will set our trajectory for decades to come.
9:23 AM Meinrath: No one is paying attention to most of the critical telcom policy battles.
9:24 AM Meinrath: Now he's gotten to spectrum policy & how our current policies are based on the latest technology of the 1930s!
9:24 AM Meinrath: Telco's spending $100M on lobbying in the US. There are only a few dozen people to lobby.
9:25 AM Meinrath: Spectrum is artificially scarce, but it is most valuable asset on many telcom companies books. Telco's want no change!
9:27 AM Meinrath: Amusing tie back to story of being frozen on a cliff wall in Turkey. 1st thought is to take no action, i.e. no risk.
9:29 AM Meinrath: Making spectrum access opportunistic (TV white spaces) is being countered by large companies - FCC frozen in inaction.
9:32 AM Meinrath: Loose coalition of public interest groups in Wash DC are fighting the good fight - and Sascha is clearly enjoying it!
9:34 AM Meinrath: Jaap raises question of commodities - Sascha: yes, new biz models scare existing players.
9:36 AM Meinrath: Same problem appears in many other policy fronts, but opportunistic spectrum access is critical for decades of progress.
9:39 AM Meinrath: Q - can you prove this is in public interest. A: poor answer in my view - based on net neutrality discussions.
9:48 AM Tom Katis, RebelVox, on what telephony would be if we designed it from scratch. Notes that even Skype is still basic telephony.
9:50 AM Katis: TV analogy - getting away from live TV (pre-recording) helped production quality. DVRs improve user convenience.
9:51 AM Katis: Voicemail should have fixed it, but didn't - requires live call to leave message and called party needs live call to listen.
9:53 AM Katis: Live is waiting on hold; Live is social anxiety; Live is often impractical (asleep, on plane, etc.). Msg'g is a relief.
9:54 AM Katis: But Msg'g not a replacement for live. Need the combination. DVRs are really buffers - buffering is what's needed.
9:57 AM Katis is setting up to give a demo - rather like this: http://bit.ly/h0u2b
10:01 AM Katis: not surprisingly, the demo on stage is not nearly as compelling as the demo in the video here: http://bit.ly/h0u2b
10:04 AM Google Wave team setting up - Lars Rasmussen & Stephanie Hannon have flown in from Sidney Australia to give talk & demo.
10:08 AM Google Wave team - apparently 6M people (including 60% of those in this room) have viewed the demo video: http://bit.ly/z6Hsm
10:12 AM Google Wave team has amusing flashes of negative reviews and a hilarious video takeoff someone did.
10:16 AM Google Wave: Now they are doing their 80 minute demo in 6 minutes. IM and email integrated with letter-by-letter type thru.
10:17 AM Google Wave: showing two people simultaneously editing the same document. Adding images (thumbnails appear in real time)
10:19 AM Google Wave: 3rd party extensions - a game has been stored within wave and Wave handles the coordination - competition in a coop tool
10:21 AM Google Wave: showing SW that syncs a map exploration using Wave API. Then show a very advanced spell checker (enormous lang. model).
10:24 AM Google Wave team now does everything in Wave: 35K accts in pre-alpha; Sept 30th - now at several 100K active users.
10:26 AM Google Wave invites going to groups that might collaborate. English only for now. 40% US, but also French, German, Spanish, ...
10:28 AM Google Wave has problem of ""Lonely Waver"" but can make a Wave public and find friends elsewhere among those who have Wave.
10:28 AM Google Wave is becoming a social networking tool. Users helping users within public waves, making friends, etc.
10:30 AM Google Wave - most Waves are private. Largest wave is 100KB (a limitation). Search for "Google Wave Extensions"
10:31 AM Google Wave example of sharing an SAP tool to build biz processes using a Wave - result goes into SAP compiler to produce result.
10:32 AM Google Wave in use by Salesforce.com who have a tool for their customers - example mobile phone company spt demo
10:37 AM Google Wave - 1st most requested is more Wave accts. 2nd is email integration where emails arrive in Wave - but on backburner.
10:37 AM Google Wave email integration would result in Wave being flooded with email. Wave can't match mature email tool.
10:38 AM Google Wave will add permissions - 3 levels: do anything; add & edit your own adds only; read only
10:40 AM Google Wave problem - hard to learn. Yes. Will users perceive enough benefit to go thru the learning curve. Initial retention good.
10:41 AM Google Wave federation ports to open today - Google and non-Google servers hosting Waves that can interop
10:42 AM Google Wave - Google voice integration is freq requested. Not sure when if can be scheduled.
10:43 AM Google Wave A to Q: Expect ecommerce - collaborative pizza ordering - coupons.
10:44 AM Google Wave Ans to Q: Wave designed for 30"" screens today, not for mobile screens, but working on a mobile version."
10:46 AM Google Wave Mobile will soon be able to add a msg to a Wave - but not experience the full intf.
10:46 AM Google Wave search for tags - needs work - not yet as simple as Google search
10:47 AM Google Wave - what about spt for other OSs? A: Wave content is very webby - need a full Web browser. Working on svr-svr protocol.
10:47 AM Google Wave - no work on std protocol for client-server yet. Maybe in 1-2 years.
10:49 AM Google Wave - any idea of offering frameworks (philosophies) like ""Getting things done""? A: focused on basics, protocols & APIs
10:50 AM Google Wave - users are developing Wave etiquette (frequently for a specific Wave) - Thinking of how to formalize this in the UI.
10:51 AM Google Wave - Q: what about user with poor links? Off-line mode? A: super-important - algorithms work equally well on flaky or offln
10:52 AM Google Wave - on poor link, stuff still arrives, just in chucks and after delay. Working on full off-line mode but will take time.
10:53 AM Google Wave Q about connecting streaming video. 6rounds has already done a video conf extension. Expect other 3rd party solutions.
10:54 AM Google Wave team pitching developers to add extensions.
10:56 AM going into a break, but expect more Google Wave after the break.to talk about Wave federation.
11:27 AM David Wang on Google Wave federation - Wave is a technology. Google Wave is a product. Federation allows diff Wave sys to intr-op.
11:28 AM David Wang - working on specs for federation, see http://waveprotocol.org/
11:30 AM Wang: Google particularly interested that other Wave-like products interoperate - pick product based on features, price, ...
11:30 AM Wang: Wave server parallel to SMTP servers.
11:31 AM Wang: Wave data model - Wave is collection of Wavelets which are group of participants, unit of concurrency; unit of federation.
11:33 AM Wang: One server owns a Wave - multiple svrs share updates. Adding a participant means adding someone who gets updates.
11:34 AM Wang: Federation works by exchanging XMPP - within a Wave server anything can be done privately.
11:35 AM Wang: Data stays on your server. Outside people only added with your permission, and only for specific waves.
11:37 AM Wang: draft protocol specs available; 40K lines of codes available as open source (Apache license, i.e. very open); also proto C-S.
11:39 AM Wang: opening federation port on WaveSandbox.com - very experimental for now. FedOne client/server very simple, to be updated.
11:39 AM Wang: Wave team seeking community participation.
11:41 AM Wang: interesting demo of GUI interface to text-based XMPP interface.
11:43 AM Wang - will open source the lion's share of Google's client and server.
11:49 AM Robert Horvitz, Open Spectrum Foundation/Alliance - of television and teraHertz - spectrum demand exploding - what mks economic sense
11:51 AM Horvitz - two legal traditions - nothing allows w/o permission or everything allowed that is not explicitly forbidden.
11:53 AM Horvitz: de-monopolize spectrum - to locales, user grps, professions, individual users & devices. ISM bands show it can work.
11:56 AM Horvitz: ""Looming spectrum crisis"" (US mobile guys want 800 MHz now) but existing economics won't spt this (telcm revenue growth 6%).
11:58 AM Horvitz - won't see 14x chg in user spending or cost of infrastructure - what is the middle ground?
12:01 PM Horvitz - interesting video of the largest screen in the world (in Las Vegas - works by projection on a canopy)
12:03 PM Horvitz: Is spectrum crisis looming - No, Cooper's law - http://bit.ly/51usH
12:05 PM Cooper's Law law: every 30 months the amount of information that can be transmitted over a given amount of radio spectrum doubles.
12:07 PM Martin Taylor, MetaSwitch, is working on voice enabling Google Wave - robot called ""Talky Talky"" conferencing also w/ transcription
12:08 PM Taylor: projects developed world in 2015 will have fixed & mobile BB with Net Neutrality, most phones smart and SIP widespread.
12:10 PM Taylor expects VoIP revolution - relationship with operator is where the biggest stakes are in play.
12:12 PM Taylor: - Right to own PSTN numbers is barrier for over-the-top providers. Expect non-mobile SIP # on mobiles - huge for EU mkt
12:14 PM Taylor interconnect complex and expensive (and with emergency svc obligation) - considerable costs
12:15 PM Taylor: visual voicemail is just an intf to a network application (V/M). A source of differentiation, but what about Google voice?
12:16 PM Taylor: QoS - is best efforts IP good enough for voice. Wideband is a major way IP is better than TDM.
12:17 PM Taylor: ease of use - pipe provider may have advantage handling setup - of course Skype did it well...
12:19 PM Taylor: Pipe owner will price voice to retain voice busines. Odds still stacked in favor of pipe owners - but be careful!
12:22 PM Stefan Agamanolis, Distance Lab (US co, he's in Scotland) Slowing Down Comms: Designs Inspired by Quality, Intimacy, & Humanity
12:23 PM Agamanolis: mobiles are like fast food - ideas for slow communications... 1) Distraction free (Phone booth used to do that).
12:27 PM Agamanolis: video of two people on phones, each in isolation tank - no smell, no touch. Sensory deprivation. Bizarre experiments.
12:29 PM Agamanolis: video of how to make phone more intimate - in bedroom, wearing a ring whose location is drawn in light on each side's bed
12:31 PM Agamanolis: Personalized interfaces - flower pot that blooms when partner far away logs into computer.
12:31 PM Agamanolis: made tilt sensing braclet which allows other party to know if you are active.
12:32 PM Agamanolis: video conferencing intf where all parties are put together in one scene with loudest talker at front - shared space.
12:34 PM Agamanolis: video of music sharing where you can listen to what nearby strangers are listening to on their headphones...
12:36 PM Agamanolis: video of sports at a distance - but ran out of time.
12:39 PM Aaron Kaplan, FunkFeuer, trends in community wireless - multiple cases in EU - open
12:40 PM Kaplan: Internet is scale free, i.e. very centralized. It's easier to connect to centralized nodes. But meshes are diff!
12:42 PM Kaplan: Nice picture of Funkfeuer network link status as of this morning. 240 nodes longest link ~40 Km; from slow to 80 Mbps.
12:44 PM Kaplan: Lots of geeks in the network, independent, meshed - we own our nodes, each has public IP addr. Users = small ISPs w/peering.
12:46 PM Kaplan: community co-location center close to Vienna IXP - leverage excess bandwidth from companies using the co-lo ctr.
12:48 PM Kaplan: similar network in Athens - 5000 nodes! Have their own internal DNS and local content and name extensions.
12:48 PM Kaplan: also Berlin, Barcelona. 70 euros for a node"
2:02 PM William Webb, Ofcom, on the use of ""junk"" spectrum - quoting the recent Microsoft funded study on Wi-Fi & open spectrum"
2:04 PM Webb: Oops, last quote was of a study by Perspective done for Ofcom.
2:05 PM Webb: projects more Wi-Fi chips than cellular chips by 2014. Indeed, mobile operators are embracing Wi-Fi off load.
2:07 PM Webb worries about congestion on Wi-Fi. UK has analog TV repeaters in 2.4 GHz band which interfere with Wi-Fi.
2:09 PM Webb: possible solutions more rules at 2.4 GHz; move to 5 GHz (but he worries about range); femtocells; cognitive radios.
2:10 PM Webb: Femtocells have strong industry support but uncertain commercial model (espc compared to Wi-Fi which works w/multi-operators).
2:11 PM Webb reporting on UK measurements btwn 10 MHz and 5 GHz - bunch of stuff down low, very little aboe 2 GHz.
2:13 PM Webb: Note that 2.4 GHz band when measured from cars is less than 1% utilization - they are usually indoors.
Note taking pause as I had to moderate my Spectrum 2.0 panel discussion with: William Webb, Phillipa Marks, Dean Bubley, Robert Horvitz and Aaron Kaplan.
4:38 PM Stefan Hopmann, Swisscom - a dinosaur that listens to its customers? Demo's click-to-call similar to other click-to-call apps...
4:43 PM Hopmann: Qs - why not standardize on some open source layer above the API so dev don't have to learn Swiss-specific APIs?
4:46 PM Colin Pons, KPN, Telephony = 80% revenue 100% profit; but VoIP is just telephony warmed over. Both will die as revenue source.
4:47 PM Pons: showing biz model canvas as invented by Alex Ostenwalder.
5:05 PM Serge Jespers, Adobe, talking about the Open Screen Project - seeking consistent runtimes on mobile to facilitate Adobe RT updates.
5:22 PM Greg Skibiski, Sense Networks, talking about DB analysis they do on carrier CDRs - Get billions of records per day.
5:26 PM Skibiski: DB for personalizing results you get - comparison with Amazon recommendation engine. - Telcos & CDRs !
5:40 PM Johanna Kollmann, Vodafone, on user interface design - starts with anthropology - oral behavior - chg'd w/writing (Walter Ong).
5:42 PM Kollmann: reading/writing in solitude until the web - IM instantaneous - blends characteristics of oral and written
6:03 PM Lee Sankey, Voxygen Limited, on NextGen Caller ID - Web browsing history linked to click-to-call Caller ID.
6:08 PM awards - most insightful speaker award - Sean Park
6:09 PM awards - most realistic speaker - Moray Rumney
6:09 PM awards - most inspirational speaker - Stefan Agamanolis
6:11 PM Communications Innovation Community Award - Andy Abramson - grabs Microphone to thank Lee for the conference.
6:13 PM Communications Innovation Community Award - Whoops they gave it to me...
6:14 PM Communications Innovation Community Award - Paul Sweeney
6:15 PM Communications Technology Award - Google Wave - Rasmussen & Hannon
6:16 PM Communications Application Award - Layar
6:17 PM Company to Watch Award - Sense Networks
6:33 PM 1800 hrs in Amsterdam; eComm has ended but there are still 25 people in the room. Time for me to power down. Bye.
==========================================================
Wednesday October 28, 2009
8:30:00 AM
Introduction
Lee S Dryburgh, eComm Media, Inc.
8:30:00 - 8:45:00
AM, Transformatorhuis
8:45:00 AM
Keynote
Goodbye Minutes, Hello Moments
Martin Geddes, BT
8:45:00 - 9:15:00 AM, Transformatorhuis
9:15:00 AM
Session
Opportunities
in Post-Telecom Connectivity
Bob Frankston, Frankston Innovating
9:15:00 - 9:30:00
AM, Transformatorhuis
9:30:00 AM
Session
Post
Financial Trauma - How is the Telecom Value Chain Now Positioned?
James Enck,
mCAPITAL
9:30:00 - 9:45:00 AM, Transformatorhuis
9:45:00 AM
Session
The Phone
Paradigm Shift: People's Understanding and the Future
Morten Hjerde, Vodafone
9:45:00 -
10:00:00 AM, Transformatorhuis
10:00:00 AM
Session
European Telecoms
2015: Silent Death or Generative Bazaar?
Julien Salanave, IDATE
10:00:00 -
10:15:00 AM, Transformatorhuis
10:15:00 AM
Break
Morning Break
11:00:00 AM
Session
Almost
all Marketing & Product Management of Telco Services is Wrong
Rudolf van der Berg, Logica
11:00:00 -
11:10:00 AM, Transformatorhuis
11:10:00 AM
Session
Technology and
Biological Evolution: What This Means for Media and Communications Technologies
Tomas Rawlings,
University of the West of
11:10:00 - 11:25:00 AM, Transformatorhuis
11:25:00 AM
Session
Open Access
Makes Economic Sense
Benoit Felten,
Yankee Group
11:25:00 - 11:40:00 AM, Transformatorhuis
11:40:00 AM
Session
Stealth
Approaches to Legislating Open Spectrum
Brough Turner,
Ashtonbrooke
11:40:00 - 11:55:00 AM, Transformatorhuis
11:55:00 AM
Demo
bettie.
Bridging the digital divide.
Ben Arent,
Bettie
11:55:00 - 12:05:00 PM, Transformatorhuis
12:05:00 PM
Lightning Talk
Bringing
Interaction and Engagement to Digital Display Advertising
Tomaz Stolfa,
Marand Lab
12:05:00 - 12:10:00 PM, Transformatorhuis
12:10:00 PM
Session
LTE
- Long Term Employment or Less Than Expected?
Moray Rumney,
Agilent
12:10:00 - 12:30:00 PM, Transformatorhuis
12:30:00 PM
Break
Social Networking Lunch
2:00:00 PM
Session
Power
to The People - Time to Seize Power
Norman Lewis,
2:00:00 - 2:15:00 PM, Transformatorhuis
2:15:00 PM
Panel
Are
the Current Ecosystems of Wireline and Wireless Still Relevant? - Moderator
Introduction
Andy Abramson,
Comunicano
2:15:00 - 2:20:00 PM, Transformatorhuis
2:20:00 PM
Panel
Are
the Current Wireline and Wireless Ecosystems Relevant? - Martin Geddes
Introduction
Martin Geddes,
BT
2:20:00 - 2:22:30 PM, Transformatorhuis
2:22:30 PM
Panel
Are
the Current Wireline and Wireless Ecosystems Relevant? - Dean Bubley
Introduction
Dean Bubley,
Disruptive Analysis
2:22:30 - 2:25:00 PM, Transformatorhuis
2:25:00 PM
Panel
Are the
Current Wireline and Wireless Ecosystems Relevant? - Moray Rumney Introduction
Moray Rumney,
Agilent
2:25:00 - 2:27:30 PM, Transformatorhuis
2:27:30 PM
Panel
Are
the Current Wireline and Wireless Ecosystems Relevant? - Brough Turner
Introduction
Brough Turner,
Ashtonbrooke
2:27:30 - 2:30:00 PM, Transformatorhuis
2:30:00 PM
Panel
Are
the Current Ecosystems of Wireline and Wireless Still Relevant?
Andy Abramson,
Comunicano
2:30:00 - 3:00:00 PM, Transformatorhuis
3:00:00 PM
Session
How
the "Internet of Things" will Change the Way we Connect
Alexandra
Deschamps-Sonsino, Tinker.it
3:00:00 - 3:15:00 PM, Transformatorhuis
3:15:00 PM
Break
Afternoon Break
4:00:00 PM
Session
How
the Mobile Phone is Changing your Reality Forever
Claire Boonstra, Layar
4:00:00 - 4:20:00
PM, Transformatorhuis
4:20:00 PM
Keynote
Beyond
the Handset: Evolving from Mobile Devices to the Ubiquitous Digital Life
Mark Rolston,
frog design
4:20:00 - 4:50:00 PM, Transformatorhuis
4:50:00 PM
Demo
Using the
Telephone as a Remote Control for any Physical Object - Part 1
Peter Kaptein,
RoomWare
4:50:00 - 4:57:30 PM, Transformatorhuis
4:57:30 PM
Demo
Using the
Telephone as a Remote Control for any Physical Object - Part 2
Valerie
Ivangorodsky, Vivango
4:57:30 - 5:05:00 PM, Transformatorhuis
5:05:00 PM
Session
Gerd Leonhard,
MediaFuturist.com
5:05:00 - 5:30:00 PM, Transformatorhuis
5:30:00 PM
Session
Chris Castiglione,
5:30:00 - 5:40:00 PM, Transformatorhuis
5:40:00 PM
Session
Enslaving
Humans using Communications Technology for Fun and Profit
Thomas McCarthy-Howe,
Jaduka
5:40:00 - 5:55:00 PM, Transformatorhuis
Thursday, October 29, 2009
8:30:00 AM
Introduction
8:45:00 AM
Keynote
21st Century Economics: Lessons for Telcos
Jaap van Till, HAN University, NL
8:45:00 - 9:05:00 AM, Transformatorhuis
9:05:00 AM
Session
Filling the Not-Spots - Provision of Service in No Service Areas
James Body, Truphone
9:05:00 - 9:15:00 AM, Transformatorhuis
9:15:00 AM
Session
9:30:00 AM
Keynote
Platforms, Markets & Bytes - the Economic Landscape of the 6th Paradigm
Sean Park, Nauiokas Park
9:30:00 - 9:50:00 AM, Transformatorhuis
9:50:00 AM
Keynote
10:20:00 AM
Break
Morning Break
11:00:00 AM
Session
The Rise of Real-Time Text and the Demise of Voice
RJ Auburn, Voxeo
11:00:00 - 11:15:00 AM, Transformatorhuis
11:15:00 AM
Session
David "Lefty" Schlesinger, LiMo Foundation/ACCESS
11:15:00 - 11:30:00 AM, Transformatorhuis
11:30:00 AM
Session
The Practical Edge of Speech Technology
Moshe Yudkowsky, Disaggregate
11:30:00 - 11:45:00 AM, Transformatorhuis
11:45:00 AM
Session
Entrepreneurial Advantages with New Open-Source Technologies
Jay Phillips, Adhearsion
11:45:00 - 12:00:00 PM, Transformatorhuis
12:00:00 PM
Session
Why H.264 SVC is Transforming Video Conferencing
Jan Linden, Global IP Solutions
12:00:00 - 12:15:00 PM, Transformatorhuis
12:15:00 PM
Keynote
Is LTE being Held Hostage by Ordinary Voice Telephony?
Dean Bubley, Disruptive Analysis
12:15:00 - 12:35:00 PM, Transformatorhuis
12:35:00 PM
Break
Social Networking Lunch
2:00:00 PM
Panel
Investing in the Telecom Value Chain for a Post-Meltdown World - Moderator Introduction
James Enck, mCAPITAL
2:00:00 - 2:05:00 PM, Transformatorhuis
2:05:00 PM
Panel
Investing in the Telecom Value Chain for a Post-Meltdown World - Hjalmar Winbladh Introduction
Hjalmar Winbladh, Rebtel
2:05:00 - 2:07:30 PM, Transformatorhuis
2:07:30 PM
Panel
Investing in the Telecom Value Chain for a Post-Meltdown World - Michael Jackson Introduction
Michael Jackson, Mangrove Capital
2:07:30 - 2:10:00 PM, Transformatorhuis
2:15:00 PM
Panel
Investing in the Telecom Value Chain for a Post-Meltdown World
James Enck, mCAPITAL
2:15:00 - 2:45:00 PM, Transformatorhuis
2:45:00 PM
Session
Structural Bypass - A Simple, Proven Path to "Real Broadband"
Brough Turner, Ashtonbrooke
2:45:00 - 3:00:00 PM, Transformatorhuis
3:00:00 PM
Session
3:15:00 PM
Break
Afternoon Break
4:30:00 PM
Session
Deploying the SILK codec, How and Why
Tim Panton, PhoneFromHere.com
4:30:00 - 4:45:00 PM, Transformatorhuis
4:45:00 PM
Demo
Googlewave - Skype - Asterisk Audio Mashup
Tim Panton, PhoneFromHere.com
4:45:00 - 4:50:00 PM, Transformatorhuis
4:50:00 PM
Lightning Talk
4:55:00 PM
Session
5:05:00 PM
Session
5:20:00 PM
Session
The Emerging Telecology of Social Networks and the Status Update
Stuart Henshall, Phweet
5:20:00 - 5:30:00 PM, Transformatorhuis
5:30:00 PM
Session
Emerging Communication: Crossing all Over
Tjeerd Hoek, frog design
5:30:00 - 5:50:00 PM, Transformatorhuis
Friday, October 30, 2009
8:30:00 AM
Introduction
Brough Turner,
Ashtonbrooke
8:30:00 - 8:45:00 AM, Transformatorhuis
9:15:00 AM
Session
The Next Wave
of Communications Applications
Cullen Jennings, Cisco
9:15:00 - 9:30:00
AM, Transformatorhuis
8:45:00 AM
Keynote
The Battle for
Communications Justice: An Open Spectrum Manifesto
Sascha Meinrath,
New
8:45:00 - 9:15:00 AM, Transformatorhuis
9:30:00 AM
Session
What Would
Telephony be Like if we Designed it Today? (with demo)
Tom Katis,
RebelVox
9:30:00 - 9:45:00 AM, Transformatorhuis
9:45:00 AM
Keynote
Why
Should You Care About Google Wave?
Stephanie Hannon, Google
9:45:00 -
10:00:00 AM, Transformatorhuis
10:00:00 AM
Keynote
Why
Should You Care About Google Wave?
Lars Rasmussen, Google
10:00:00 -
10:15:00 AM, Transformatorhuis
10:15:00 AM
Break
Morning Break
11:00:00 AM
Session
Wave Federation:
Building An Open Network
David Wang, Google
11:00:00 -
11:20:00 AM, Transformatorhuis
11:20:00 AM
Session
Opening of the
Terahertz Region
Robert Horvitz,
Open Spectrum Foundation/Alliance
11:20:00 - 11:35:00 AM, Transformatorhuis
11:35:00 AM
Session
Ubiquitous Voice
over Broadband - is There a Future Role for the Smart Pipe?
Martin Taylor, MetaSwitch
11:35:00 -
11:50:00 AM, Transformatorhuis
11:50:00 AM
Session
Slowing
Down Communication: Designs Inspired by Quality, Intimacy, and Humanity
Stefan Agamanolis,
Distance Lab
11:50:00 - 12:05:00 PM, Transformatorhuis
12:05:00 PM
Session
Current
Trends in Community Wireless Networks and Beyond
Aaron Kaplan,
FunkFeuer
12:05:00 - 12:15:00 PM, Transformatorhuis
12:35:00 PM
Break
Social Networking Lunch
2:00:00 PM
Keynote
Unlicensed
Spectrum: Future Regulation
Prof. William Webb,
Ofcom
2:00:00 - 2:20:00 PM, Transformatorhuis
2:20:00 PM
Panel
Spectrum
2.0 - What's Really Happening? - Moderator Introduction
Brough Turner,
Ashtonbrooke
2:20:00 - 2:25:00 PM, Transformatorhuis
2:25:00 PM
Panel
Spectrum 2.0
- What's Really Happening? - Dean Bubley Introduction
Dean Bubley,
Disruptive Analysis
2:25:00 - 2:27:30 PM, Transformatorhuis
2:27:30 PM
Panel
Spectrum 2.0
- What's Really Happening? - Robert Horvitz Introduction
Robert Horvitz,
Open Spectrum Foundation/Alliance
2:27:30 - 2:30:00 PM, Transformatorhuis
2:30:00 PM
Panel
Spectrum 2.0
- What's Really Happening? - Prof. William Webb Introduction
Prof. William Webb,
Ofcom
2:30:00 - 2:32:30 PM, Transformatorhuis
2:32:30 PM
Panel
Spectrum 2.0
- What's Really Happening? - Phillipa Marks Introduction
Phillipa Marks,
Plum Consulting
2:32:30 - 2:35:00 PM, Transformatorhuis
2:35:00 PM
Panel
Spectrum 2.0
- What's Really Happening? - Aaron Kaplan Introduction
Aaron Kaplan,
FunkFeuer
2:35:00 - 2:37:30 PM, Transformatorhuis
2:37:30 PM
Panel
Spectrum 2.0
- What's Really Happening?
Brough Turner,
Ashtonbrooke
2:37:30 - 3:05:00 PM, Transformatorhuis
3:05:00 PM
Session
When
Will HD Voice Become a Reality?
Martyn Davies,
Dialogic
3:05:00 - 3:20:00 PM, Transformatorhuis
3:20:00 PM
Break
Afternoon Break
4:00:00 PM
Keynote
Michael Calabrese,
New
4:00:00 - 4:20:00 PM, Transformatorhuis
4:20:00 PM
Session
How
to get More Value out of Customer Interactions by Blending Online with Voice
Stefan Hopmann,
Swisscom
4:20:00 - 4:35:00 PM, Transformatorhuis
4:35:00 PM
Session
Telephony
is Dying, are Telco's?
Colin Pons,
KPN
4:35:00 - 4:50:00 PM, Transformatorhuis
4:50:00 PM
Session
Open Screen
Project: Next Generation Contextual Applications
Andrew Shorten,
Adobe
4:50:00 - 5:05:00 PM, Transformatorhuis
5:05:00 PM
Session
Lifestyle
Segmentation from Carrier Location and Call Data - Part 1
Greg Skibiski,
Sense Networks
5:05:00 - 5:15:00 PM, Transformatorhuis
5:15:00 PM
Session
Lifestyle
Segmentation from Carrier Location and Call Data - Part 2
Tony Jebara,
5:15:00 - 5:25:00 PM, Transformatorhuis
5:25:00 PM
Session
Back to the
Roots? Emerging Communication Paradigms in the Context of Secondary Orality
Johanna Kollmann,
Vodafone
5:25:00 - 5:40:00 PM, Transformatorhuis
5:40:00 PM
Session
Transforming
CallerID into CallerContext
Lee Sankey,
Voxygen Limited
5:40:00 - 5:50:00 PM, Transformatorhuis
5:50:00 PM
Session
Lee S Dryburgh,
eComm Media, Inc.
5:50:00 - 6:15:00 PM, Transformatorhuis
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