Home » Tag: skyfire

July 6th, 2009

Categories: Entertainment industry

Hulu has been highly praised for its sleek design and vast amounts of commercial content, stifling nay-sayers by bringing competing networks together to share content and audiences. But these networks can’t seem to understand how important convenience is to attracting customers away from piracy and file-sharing.

I already wrote about Hulu getting into a technology pissing contest with Boxee, trying to prevent the media center software from making it more convenient to watch Hulu.  This was likely meant to prevent consumers from watching Hulu on their televisions.  Now Hulu has blocked the PS3 web browser and the Windows Mobile Skyfire browser from viewing Hulu content.  None of these browsers changed Hulu content – all the advertising was still in place.  Hulu likely is blocking these sources simply to give the content providers more control – and allowing them to use the television and mobile phone as addition revenue streams.  But this hurts everyone. Consumers loose the convenience of Hulu and go back to piracy (where they can download and watch content however they choose) or they find other content served in their preferred medium. Hulu looses audience and spends resources hurting consumer value rather than increasing it.  Consumers can’t be forced into consuming content like the networks prefer. Giving the consumers choice is the only way to compete and grow.

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August 8th, 2008

Categories: Technology

Just as I praise 3rd-party innovation on other mobile systems, Apple shows itself less willing to host an open environment.  A developer released a $999.99 iPhone application called “I Am Rich” that did nothing but show a red screen. Some bloggers called for Apple to takedown the program for no reason other than it was significantly over-priced.

Why remove the app? Yes it’s stupid and the eight people who bought it are weird to say the least, but if people want to spend $1,000 on a red screen, who is Apple to say they can’t? MG Siegler of Venture Beat says since the App Store isn’t completely open, Apple shouldn’t have approved it in the first place.  But why? “I Am Rich” doesn’t violate any of the rules Apple laid out: no pornography, bandwidth abuse, or threat to privacy.  The program specifically states there are no hidden features. Anyone who buys the program knows exactly what they’re getting.

By de-listing the program, Apple is expanding its control over what is allowed on the iPhone, proving if it doesn’t like your program, it can and will remove it. Apple also removed BoxOffice, a movie showtime search engine, without notice or justification. Without standard rules on what is allowed on the iPhone, developers may be scared away from getting on Apple’s bad side. Further, it scares away innovation that expands usage and value for the iPhone - no one wants to risk time and money to get banned.

Apple keeps fighting open standards for the iPhone which works now amid the hype. But competition from open systems like Google Android (if it’s ever released) and Symbian will challenge Apple’s concept of top-down control.  The reason Windows Mobile has full flash support in the Skyfire browser is thanks to 3rd-party developers given free-reign to do as they wish on a platform.  If Apple wants the iPhone to really change the mobile space, it needs to let developers do what they do best - develop.

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August 8th, 2008

Categories: Gadgets and gizmos

I just joined Skyfire’s private beta and my response is wow. Skyfire crams a full desktop experience into the tiny mobile screen for Windows Mobile with impressive speed and sleek design.  This includes full Flash support, putting all of YouTube and Hulu on your phone. Even Ajax and Java heavy sites like Google Reader run smoothly.  Many options are lacking in this early version, but the browsing experience is an impressive sign of browsing to come.

Skyfire’s compatibility works better than the iPhone Safari but lacks features needed to be the best.  You can’t change your start page (though the Skyfire homepage conveniently includes your bookmarks and history). There’s no tabbing or fit-to-screen zoom like on Opera meaning I’ll keep Opera around for text heavy sites.  The touch controls take some getting used to - the iPhone still wins on easy-of-use with multi-touch zoom. Most frustrating is the free browser needs to authenticate and closes if you loose your connection.

Unfortunately, Skyfire remains in private beta with no invites, so a lot of this is just me showing off. These many frustrations prevent Skyfire from becoming my default browser, but showing off YouTube and Hulu to my iPhone wielding friends makes it a must have application.  See screenshots after the jump.

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