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The Top Five Reasons The Mobile Web Rocks
Scott Karp over at Publishing 2.0 last week claimed that, bluntly, the mobile Web sucks. Karp is a blogger for whom I have a tremendous amount of respect, but, on this topic, he's totally wrong. I'll grant that the mobile Web isn't perfect. Neither is the desktop Web, for that matter. I'll also concede that the mobile Web can be slow and that latency is still a big issue, even on 3G networks. But even if we concede all of this, the mobile Web still offers access to the entire Internet from almost any place at any time. If that's not cool, I don't know what is. 1. 3G Networks Are Fast And Getting Faster. 2. Public Wi-Fi Is Widely Available. For many users, public hotspot services are often cheaper than 3G data plans -- especially from carriers like T-Mobile, which bundles Wi-Fi with its EDGE data plans. And if your travel is limited to major metro areas, it can be almost as ubiquitous as 3G. What major U.S. city doesn't have more Starbucks locations than air molecules? 3. Mobile Web Sites Are Easier To Read And Access Than They Used To Be. I do share Karp's criticism of surfing the Web on the iPhone. Who really wants to read a Web page that's designed for a 15-inch monitor on a device the size of a smartphone? But thanks to dotMobi and WAP, we don't have to deal with this problem. There are many Web sites optimized for mobile devices. This means the sites are easy to access on most cell phones and page load times are fast. On some mobile Web sites, blazingly fast. 4. Location, Location, Location. 5. There Is Still Very Little Advertising On The Mobile Web. For advertisers, the third screen is a fresh, untapped resource of leads. Since mobile ads are still new, they can generate impressive results for marketers. Not that I am saying anyone should go out and start ruining my own mobile Web experience with tons of new ads. Thanks to these advances, we know more people are using the mobile Web, including consumers in the United States. And as the networks and the devices continue to improve, and new features like location are embedded in more mobile applications, more people will continue to use the mobile Web. For much of the developing world, the mobile Web will likely be the only Web billions of people ever access. Put simply, mobile, not the desktop, is the global future of the Web. « The Business Case For An Internet Refrigerator | Main | Nokia Buys Mapping Company, Pokes Fun At Apple » |
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