Mobile Web Revisited 7-7-7 (Update)
Published by Rudy De Waele July 8th, 2007 in Mobile Apps, Mobile Web, web 2.0, Analysis, Usability, Mobile Search, Mobile RSS, mobile 2.0, Mobile Blog, QR codes, W3C, Mobile Video, Nokia, iPhone, Mobile Games, N800, Convergence Tags: .mobi, Analysis, browser, browsing, convergence, dotmobi, iphone, mobile 2.0, Mobile Apps, Mobile Blog, Mobile Games, Mobile RSS, Mobile Search, mobile seo, mobile video, mobile web, mobile20, mobileok, mobileweb, n800, nokia, opera, QR codes, safari, scobleizer, SEO, usability, w3c, web 2.0, winkiste.I know how mTrends looks great on a PSP and on a Nokia N800; I haven’t seen my blog however on the iPhone, but I suppose it looks ok - the iPhone features Safari, the most advanced web browser ever on a portable device.
UPDATE => Kelly sended me some shots of mTrends on the iPhone, looks pretty cool, I cannot see from the screenshots if all my sidebar widgets work and if the feed subscription functionality works automatically in the mobile Safari browser… Anyway thanks, Kelly!


Since it’s going to take a while before everyone is able to buy an iPhone, and before device manufacture competitors catch up with Apple, browsing the Mobile Web stays somehow a non-standardised fragmented experience for most people. I have been writing about this confusion before, now it was kind of weird reading this ’strikethrough’ story from Scobleizer on how the iPhone gets confused with the mobile version of the Google Reader. Note that the Safari browser shows the desktop web pages - the ‘real’ internet, as most people know it; Robert just got confused with the different - mobile web - URL’s to browse to.
Now both ways to acces the internet will most probably have to live next to eachother on mobile devices since no real solution is in sight to converge the mobile web as ‘one real web’. There’s the ‘full’ browsing experience possible on the high-end devices like the iPhone, PSP’s and for example the Nokia N800 and then there are the ‘adaptive’ browsers that will adapt at it’s best the existing web page to your phone, like Nokia S60, Openwave and Opera browsers and others like Google Mobile transcoding normal web pages so they fit the mobile screen.
But what about the Mobile Web users?
To my view there are 4 different types of mobile web users to distinguish (some with a combined use), people who:
1. want to read their favourite feeds (through mobile browser or standalone applications)
2. browse websites and pages (using Nokia, Opera Mini or Safari browser on the mobile)
3. search from within a browser using Google Mobile, Yahoo! oneSearch, …
4. use standalone apps/tools to connect to people or communities like Jaiku, Twitter, Fring, Google Mobile Maps, etc…
Currently I use 1 and 4 the most, since browsing the web on the mobile is simply still too annoying and slow and searching on my phone not context relevant for me as it is now; I read feeds and use standalone apps to connect to people and find locations, that’s it. With the coming of more and more webapps, RSS tools and communities going mobile the coming months - YouTube, MySpace, Facebook, Netvibes, and alikes - some of them already there - the ways to get to those apps will become even more diverse, not to mention about how to handle correctly Mobile SEO.
For a simplified any (txt) feed ‘works on any device’ solution there’s still the real pre-cursor of the Mobile Web, Winksite. David Harper writes in this Love the Mobile Web post, how Winksite makes it easy to publish mobile Internet sites and build simple mobile connections via mobile phones:
“Winksite is the first standards compliant mobile Website builder that also includes RSS-driven content deployment and mobile-tuned community features such as forum, chat, and polls. This approach delivers fresh content, fast-loading screens, and universally accessible community features to you and your audience. The Winksite service is a free and fully hosted solution. No software install on your phone is necessary to view a Winksite powered mobile site. Learn more about how it works.”
I’ve had mTrends on Winksite since a while now just because my blog was always accesible on most phones, now for anyone who wants his internet blog or pages to be displayed correctly and available on ANY phone, I think Winksite is still the best option. Check below how MobileOK my Winksite blog is using the dotMobi’s MobiReady Report generator.

BTW: great tool! I like the way it displays information on pricing and speed of different networks to acces your mobile web pages.
To close this post, I would like to add this paragraph from Dave’s post on The mobile Web is not just for phones anymore:
“Gamers and their WiFi connected version of the Internet have been largely ignored by Mobile & Web 2.0 publishing and community platforms. We’re changing that. Whatever you choose to build at Winksite will now be served up optimized and fully functioning to the Sony PSP browser and Nintendo DS Lite Opera browser over WiFi connections. With the DS-Lite in mind we provide a fast loading and readable version while in overview mode. The PSP is delivered a version that eliminates the horizontal scrolling (and reduces the vertical scrolling) required to read posts and chat with your friends.”
Right attitude, Dave. Keep going!
What about you? I’m interested in your experiences and opinions
4 Responses to “Mobile Web Revisited 7-7-7 (Update)”
- 1 Pingback on Jul 8th, 2007 at 3:06 pm
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Hi Rudy — I just posted on some of these same topics. In my view, the iPhone will catalyze the market to deliver a slew of new advanced web-capable devices. The additional fragmentation that will come with this explosion of form factors and capabilities could lead to additional confusion in the developer community of how best to build services and applications that work across a range of devices. In this context, developer guidelines are more important than ever, and that’s why we are kicking off an effort to develop guidelines for advanced applications in the W3C Mobile Web Best Practices working group.
Opera mini is being optimized for mobile, but Safari is a platform for many applications to come. So being that really different in context. http://www.iphonebeep.com, is currently listing some of the apps for iphone.
Zinadoo is a similar tool to Winksite in that it is a completely free and easy to use mobile website creation tool. In minutes anyone can create and publish their very own mobile website. Users get to customise their site to their own tastes and add some cool interactive features. Then they can use the many sharing features provided to tell everyone about their mobile site.