{"id":238,"date":"2006-12-30T23:16:14","date_gmt":"2006-12-31T07:16:14","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/wapreview.com\/?p=238"},"modified":"2020-12-12T09:45:29","modified_gmt":"2020-12-12T17:45:29","slug":"best-of-the-mobile-web-2006","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/wapreview.com\/238\/","title":{"rendered":"2006 – The Mobile Web Grows Up"},"content":{"rendered":"
2006<\/strong> has been an exciting year to be involved with the mobile web and mobile data in general. I want to highlight four major developments this past year which I believe are going to have a profound and positive effect on the quality of the mobile web experience for years to come.<\/p>\n To me, 2006 is the year that the mobile web and mobile data entered mainstream consciousness. The year saw a flurry of mobile site launches by major media and internet companies like Time<\/a>, Newsweek<\/a>, Weblogs, Inc<\/a> , Gawker Media<\/a> and virtually every daily newspaper in the country. Most major online news, sports, travel and finance sites now have a mobile web presence, many of which were launched or redesigned this year. Google, Yahoo, Microsoft and AOL did total redesigns of their mobile portals with Google and Microsoft in particular rolling out loads of new and well done features.<\/p>\n But what about adoption by users, is mobile web and data traffic up? In May Forbes carried a widely quoted article<\/a> suggesting that Mobile Web and Data growth was slowing. Personally I don’t buy that. My own 3 year old YesWAP.com portal – which is just a hand picked catalog of my favorite off-portal sites – saw 2006 traffic that was quadruple that of 2005. Actually, Forbes blamed the slowdown on hard to use (compared to iTunes!) carrier portals and lack of imaginative marketing – again by the carriers. If you focus on the carriers you will miss the real action in mobile data today which is happening off-portal. Telcos and ISPs like AOL tried and failed to keep the eyeballs on their proprietary portals in the early days of the web. The same thing is happening in mobile with the carriers rapidly becoming just pipes to innovative off-portal sites and data services.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":" 2006 has been an exciting year to be involved with the mobile web and mobile data in general. I want to highlight four major developments this past year which I believe are going to have a profound and positive effect on the quality of the mobile web experience for years to come. Mobile web advertising comes of age. I credit this almost entirely to AdMob, the startup that took the Google AdSense model and applied it to mobile. Seems like … Continue reading \n
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