
Calling from a console
- 26 Feb 08, 21:30 GMT
What do we want from a mobile device? Will video calls ever take off? And who will win the battle to bring cheap mobile communications to a young audience? Three questions I鈥檝e been puzzling over since I made my way to the top of the BT Tower for a demo of a new service being launched by BT and Sony鈥檚 games division.
It鈥檚 called Go! Messenger, and it brings wireless video, voice and instant messaging to Sony鈥檚 PSP portable games console. The service will be free to the PSP鈥檚 11 million users across Europe 鈥 though they need to shell out around 拢35 for the mini camera that clips onto the console, and they need a broadband connection. In essence it is no different from the Skype video messaging service or Apple鈥檚 iChat, but the two partners say they are pushing new boundaries by bringing this kind of communication to a mobile device.
So far, though, video calls have been the great white elephant of the telecoms industry. In 1970 AT&T launched its Picturephone service in the United States. Nobody wanted it. In 1993 BT launched its Relate Videophone - 拢500 each or 拢900 for two so Mum could see you. Guess what? It was another flop. Then, in this decade, the whole promise of 3G phones was that we would all be making video calls on them. Are you? Thought not.
So it鈥檚 not clear that video calls will bring hordes of new customers to the PSP. It鈥檚 also not entirely evident what is in it for either BT or Sony. Of course, the telecoms company has struggled to connect with a young audience since splitting off its mobile division Cellnet (now O2) in 2001. Warren Buckley of BT鈥檚 Mobility & Convergence division told me the service promised his company 鈥渧ery significant brand exposure to users who may not be familiar with BT.鈥 Err, right.
Sony鈥檚 Nainan Shah said that, while there were no revenues in the short-term, 鈥渢his will help us do the research. It鈥檚 laying the foundations for something we think could be very healthy from a profit point of view.鈥 Of course, Sony needs something to breathe new life into the PSP, which has sold fewer than half as many units worldwide as the rival Nintendo DS.
But there is a prize that both the entertainment and the telecoms company are seeking. Whoever can convince a young audience that they have got the device which can entertain them and help them communicate all in one simple package can end up making a lot of money. At the moment, the mobile phone firms believe that text and music are the two killer applications that this audience wants. Now Sony and BT are betting that a combination of games and video messages will provide the recipe for success, But I鈥檓 not convinced that gamers are really that keen on looking at each other.

YouTube back in Pakistan
- 26 Feb 08, 15:23 GMT
A couple of hours ago 蜜芽传媒 colleagues in Islamabad told me they were able to get onto YouTube without problems, and now Google has been in touch to confirm that the blocking of the site by the Pakistani government appears to be over.
Separately, a software company that makes it possible for users in countries like China to get access to blocked sites told me they鈥檇 seen a big spike in traffic from Pakistan over the last two days, so it looks as though many people were already getting round the ban.
It still isn鈥檛 entirely clear why the campaign to prevent Pakistani users getting access to YouTube ended up causing a worldwide outage on Sunday. But network engineers seem pretty sure that it was a mistake. The most detailed account I鈥檝e seen is in this of Arbor Networks.
After including a helpful (pdf link) from the telling ISPs to block YouTube, Mr McPherson goes on to outline in painstaking detail just how they might have set about that task. He concludes that it was unlikely that the impact beyond Pakistan鈥檚 borders was intentional 鈥 but expresses concerns about what the whole incident says about the security of what he describes as 鈥渢his extremely fragile and vulnerable piece of infrastructure.鈥
Still, the fact that YouTube is now back in action in Pakistan makes me revise my thoughts on the clash between governments and the freedom of speech and thought which the internet promises. Yesterday I thought it was a case of Government 1, Internet 0. Now it looks as though, the internet has struck back with a couple of late goals.
UPDATE 16:57:
The plot thickens. Pakistan's Telecoms Authority now says it has unblocked YouTube because the offending clip - a trailer for a supposedly anti-Islamic film by a Dutch politician - has been removed. "I've been told that this video has been taken out and we have issued instructions to unblock this website," PTA chairman Shahzada Alam Malik told APTV.
Google says it never comments on individual YouTube videos. All a spokesman would tell me is this: "When we receive complaints about videos we review them against our terms of use - which include things like pornography or gratuitous violence or hate speech - and where videos break those rules we remove them."
He wasn't happy at my suggestion that YouTube had blinked. But I'm putting that down as another goal for the government - making it Government 2, Internet 2.

Phil Harrison's surprise goodbye
- 26 Feb 08, 03:22 GMT
Phil Harrison has from Sony as president of their worldwide studios.
So that's why he wasn't doing any interviews at GDC this year!!
I had a chance to grab a few words with Phil Harrison last week at an event organised by developer Dave Perry. Before going to San Francisco I had asked to speak with him but had been told by Sony's PR team that Phil was stepping away somewhat from being seen as the face/voice of Sony games development.
Of course, all the pieces fit now. It's clear this was not a dramatic departure but one Sony had been aware of for sometime.
Quite how long is unclear - as is Mr Harrison's reasons for leaving the firm, especially now that many of the PlayStation 3's launch problems are dissolving.
I have no insider knowledge on why he's left. All I can say is that he was very relaxed and pointedly frank last week during a roundtable discussion on the future of gaming.
Within a few minutes of conversation he had criticised Sony in Japan for not seeing the value in social gaming early enough and predicted the death of consoles by declaring that public utility computing - ie gaming over the network - was the industry's future.
His frankness is also more easily understood now.
So where will he go? The bigger publishers have lots of developer studios all around the world these days so Phil Harrison's skills would be welcome at someone like EA or Ubisoft, I'm sure. There are rumours of a move to Atari, although the source on this is cloudy and I wonder if they are high profile enough.
But I'm often wrong...
One final point - when I finished chatting to Phil I suggested we catch up on my return to London and he agreed.
So Phil, if you're still interested in meeting up, I'd love to hear what's on the horizon.
Drop me an e-mail: darrenDOTwatersATbbcDOTcoDOTuk
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