6 Billion Connected (a post Digital Divide narrative) Stuart
Gannes Digital Vision Program Stanford University FDIS Conference
July 1, 2008
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The future is already here, its just not evenly distributed.
-William Gibson, 1998 Hint: Look to the developing world for
innovation.
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Two scenarios
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Top down Telephone wires and radio unite to make neighbors of
nations. - AT&T Lobby NY, 1932
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Bottoms up, sort of Half the worlds population has a cell phone
80% of world population within reach of cellular signal Estimate: 5
Billion connected by 2015
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Personal mobility: The killer app
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Global connectivity Mobile subscription growth: 39% annually in
Africa, and 28% in Asia between 2005-2007. India and China alone
added 154 million and 143 million new subscribers during this
period.
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Mobile devices: Talk is cheap 294.3m handsets/quarter 3.3
million/day! Mostly low cost ~$40 today More than dozen vendors
Prepaid phones dominate world-wide No billing relationship to
provider Buy SIM card out of vending machine
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Not talking is cheaper! From calling to non-calling If you are
going to meet with someone they might say: Ill do a missed call
when I get there. SMS: At first just a way to save money when
communicating Now: The biggest revolution in the language, ever.
Spain: More phones (50m) than people (44m)
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(((o_o))) Not writing is easier
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Mcommerce is faster
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Money travels wider
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Historical caveat - or precedent
http://youtube.com/watch?v=AhsSgcsTMd4
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New mobile apps From communicating (one to one by voice, and
text) to Broadcast SMS, Twitter From entertainment (consuming
media, games) to User generated content, social networks From
information (news, sports weather alerts) to Maps, recommendations:
Wisdom of crowds Commerce: From purchasing (goods, services) to
Minutes as currency
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Mobile devices wannabe computers From communication platforms
to communications-enhanced application platforms
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But not personal computers! Platforms + mobile twist: New
silicon, OS New add-ons New form factor New I/O Apps different
Interaction with cloud different Different display and keyboard
Battery constraints matter
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Early metadata apps Berkeley Traffic Modeling Tracked 100
drivers with GPS-equipped phones. Traffic speeds computed based on
locations, System predicts the onset of traffic interruptions far
more effectively than current traffic systems (which cost millions)
by using an infrastructure based on people, their mobiles and
movements. MIT Reality Mining The collection of machine-sensed
environmental data pertaining to human social behavior: work
location, time and network usage, etc. correlates with
productivity. With just a cell phone, you can go into organizations
and find out how happy and how productive people are, which is
really pretty amazing. --Sandy Pentland MIT
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Mobile computing platform will
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thrive on data, and Mobile devices record reality and upload
info to networks Reality recognizable by a human Audio, photo,
video Reality recognizable by a computer GPS Accelerometers, motion
sensors Compass Temperature, barometric pressure (altitude),
CO2
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attract developers, and Mainframes - IBM PCs - Microsoft/Intel
Mobile computing contenders Microsoft/Windows Mobile Google/Android
Nokia/Symbian RIM Apple Winner creates/owns virtuous cycle
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address human needs Innovation despite constraints Bottoms up,
entrepreneurial innovation New business models Carriers?
Advertisers? Media? New concerns Security Re-identification:
Relating a person to a trail of seemingly anonymous and homogenous
data left across different locations Computer virus Mob behavior 6
Billion connections evenly distributed