Buried in Bob Iannucci’s discussion at Supernova 2008 last week was this comment: “Connecting people only through voice communications is limited,” the Nokia chief technical officer said.
To us, that sums up everything Nokia is doing, including today’s announcement. Nokia, the world’s largest handset manufacturer, is purchasing Plazes, the location-based social networking service based in Berlin.
Syndicated from last100, our digital lifestyle blog
Plazes, founded in 2005, lets people alert their friends about what they are doing and where they are — sort of Twitter and Loopt rolled into one. Users can subscribe to their friends, a group of friends, or to specific locations known as “Plazes.”
Updates can be done via plazes.com, by mobile phone and text messaging, or by a number of third-party applications using the Plazes’ API. And, we can expect, Plazes will be on millions of Nokia phones worldwide as soon as possible.
“Nokia is a perfect partner for us because they share our product vision and have the muscle to bring locative presence to hundreds of millions of people all over the world,” the Plazes team writes on its blog. “What better partner than Nokia for exploring innovative ways of connecting people?”
With Plazes and other recent acquisitions, Nokia is clearly connecting people through location-based services, maps, music communities, gaming, and — almost forgot — voice.
In 2006 Nokia purchased a mobile mapping company Gate5, also based in Berlin. Nokia followed that with the intent to buy Navteq, the world’s largest data mapping company. That $8 billion deal is expected to be completed soon. Other social networking and media companies purchased by Nokia include Twango, Enpocket, and Loudeye.
Nokia is busy with its own service development as well, including desktop-mobile portal Ovi, the Comes With Music initiative, an online music store, and the N-Gage gaming effort.
Imagine everything Nokia offers wrapped in a cuddly location-based, mapping, social network cloth where all of its users are connected to their interests and each other in the virtual and physical worlds at the same time.
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share one good LBS tutorial
http://to.swang.googlepages.com/lbs
Posted by: Elibom | June 23, 2008 11:34 PM
So Nokia is diversifying the business then. Maybe the mobile phone company is reaching its peak level in the product life cyclle and Nokia does not want to be stuck? Hmmm..makes me think...
Posted by: The Webloglearner | June 24, 2008 3:01 AM
That's a grat move by Nokia, even if I keep considering the other new of the Day (Nokia, Sony Ericsson, Motorola and NTT DOCOMO joining for a free open Symbian Platform)
http://www.nokia.com/A4136001?newsid=1230416
the real turning point for making it simple for developers to build a mobile app.
Posted by: Marco | June 24, 2008 5:51 AM
mobile LBS == mobile navigation ++ ?
One example here.
The US VZW also provides lots of mobile location-based services. One of them is called navigation services. it is about $5+ per month. However, as you know, the GPS service itself is free to public and a GPS receiver is as low as $200 with a pretty decent screen and airtime charge. (More decent than a mobile phone.) It is really difficult for me to choose the VZW navigation service instead of buying a GPS receiver. On the other hand, the VZW GPS is a A-GPS/AFLT based hybrid solution under the tight control of the operator. If you travel out of the VZW network coverage, you will be out of luck. However, with a standalone GPS receiver, you have no problem
http://mobilelocationservices.blogspot.com/
Posted by: Elibom | June 24, 2008 9:49 AM
Really a good post and excellent information, thanks
http://newgad.blogspot.com
Posted by: Raju | June 24, 2008 9:27 PM