Tuesday, November 4, 2008

A WALK DOWN THE ANDROID MARKET

With the launch of the first Android-powered phone T-Mobile G1 and the opening of the Android Market, a number of online applications for the Android platform have gone live. Google and the Open Handset Alliance have also made the Android platform source code open to developers letting them build applications and services for Android-powered devices. The Android Market lets users download, rate, and comment on applications. These user ratings coupled with usage statistics will determine how the applications are ranked. Developers need to register with a US$ 25 fee and go through an authentication process before being able to put up their applications on the marketplace. The initial applications will be the free, but from first quarter 2009 developers will be able to distribute paid applications. Developers will be able to take home 70% of the revenue generated from the paid-for applications, while the rest of the revenue share will go to the carriers and billing settlement fees (Google will not keep a share for itself).

Applications available already fall into six categories: Contacts / Events; Environment; Information Services; Location Based; Shopping; and Social Networking.

Application, Developer, URL

Description

Contacts / events

e-ventr, Michael Zitzelsberger, www.e-ventr.com

A personal event organizer and friendship scout that allows one to arrange meetings, organize activities, and accept invitations.

iSkoot For Skype, iSkoot Inc., www.iskoot.com

It lets users access their Skype contacts, make and receive Skype calls, chat, and place SkypeOut calls from their mobile phone. Currently available in the US only, iSkoot does not require a WiFi connection or 3G networks.

Maverick, Multiple Facets Inc., www.multiplefacets.com

Maverick is a Google Talk compatible instant messenger that integrates photos, scribbles, audio clips, location, and graphical emotions into the experience. It also enables users to receive Gmail notifications.

Environment

Ecorio, Jeff Kao, Robert Lam, Gary Pong, Taneem Talukdar, Jason Wong, www.ecorio.org

Ecorio tracks one’s “mobile carbon footprint” and encourages one to reduce and offset it. It runs in the background of one’s phone and tracks when one is moving by car or public transport and adds up the trips and calculates carbon output for each trip. It also draws from Google Transit to suggest transit routes one could take for the trips. One can purchase equivalent offset amounts based on their carbon footprint and these are used to fund greenhouse gas reduction projects.

Information services

BreadCrumbz, Amos Yoffe, www.bcrumbz.com

A picture-based navigation application for mobile phones that lets one navigate using pictures as well as a map. One can create their own picture routes and share them.

WikiMobile Encyclopedia, Bonfire Media Inc, www.bonfiremedia.com

Provides access to all 2 million Wikipedia articles, including pictures and quick facts. Users can bookmark their favorites for easy tracking.

Wikitude , Philipp Breuss, www.mobilizy.com

A mobile global travel guide based on location-based Wikipedia content. It helps in planning a trip or to find out about landmarks in one’s surroundings. It offers searching of 350,000 world-wide points of interest by GPS or by address and have results displayed in a list view, map view, or camera view.

Location based

cab4me light, Skycoders , www.cab4me.com

Lets one select the pickup location on a map or from their contacts to get a cab. cab4me light then provides a list of cab companies serving the area along with contact information.

iMap Weather, Weathertop Consulting LLC and Weather Decision Technologies Inc, www.wdtinc.com

Offers graphically enriched "street level" weather information including high-quality radar images, lightning strike information, current weather conditions, weather forecasts, and active severe weather watches and warnings notifications. Users can explore local weather conditions interactively, create pinpoint forecasts, and zoom in and out of radar weather data for current or chosen locations.

iSafe, Navee Technologies, www.freefamilywatch.com

iSafe offers safety guides with voice alerts on high-crime neighborhoods, severe weather, allergies, air quality, and speed limit monitoring.

LifeAware, LifeAware LLC, www.lifeaware.net

LifeAware lets one use their phone or the LifeAware website to locate friends and family. Users can setup zones to trigger alerts when friends or family enter or leave the area. They can also tag locations with descriptions and images and share them. Users can specify whether to use GPS, network, or both.

Locale, Clare Bayley, Carter Jernigan, Jasper Lin, Jennifer Shu, Christina Wright, www.androidlocale.com

Locale is a location-aware settings manager that automatically changes one’s phone's settings based on conditions, such as location. One can create Situations, which specify conditions under which one’s settings should change. Examples of true/false-based condition questions are "Am I at home?" or "Is my battery below 20%?" and corresponding settings can be "turn on call forwarding to my landline" and "turn off Wi-Fi and Bluetooth" respectively. One can also use it to automatically turn their phone into silent / vibrator mode when they near their office by specifying distance and location.

Marvin, Laurent Pontier, www.marvinreloaded.com

Marvin lets users publish and browse user generated content by location, type, services, keyword, or all combined. It provides access to a collection of location based services such as buddy and family Finder (MyLocation), job search (MyJob), real estate locator (MyHouse), cars locator (MyCar), geo-blogging (MyLog), and friends seeker (MyHeart).

Shopping

Compare Everywhere, Jeffrey Sharkey, www.compare-everywhere.com

A shopping assistant that allows users to scan a barcode and instantly search online and local stores to find out if the offered sale price is a good deal. The application also offers reviews and allows keeping track of shopping lists and wish lists and sharing them with friends. Users can connect with stores using driving directions or phone.

ShopSavvy, Big in Japan, www.biggu.com

ShopSavvy is a comparison-shopping application that lets one use the mobile phone camera to scan the barcode of any product to find the best prices online and through the inventories of local stores using GPS.

Social networking

MySpace Mobile, Myspace.com, www.myspace.com

MySpace Mobile for Android lets one stay connected with friends on their MySpace network, share photos, view their inbox, comments, bulletins, etc. Users can also add photos from their phone camera, send messages, and post blog updates.

Wertago, Wertago team, www.wertago.com

Wertago is an application designed for nightlifers that lets users share their experience and rate and tag venues, upload and comment on pictures, and connect with other socialites.



-Smarajit Dasgupta

1 comment:

streetstylz said...

Regarding ShopSavvy:

NeoMedia has multiple patents that cover this technology

http://www.neom.com/13.html

Patent #6,651,053 — Interactive system for investigating products on a network