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Man and Superman

Ian Delaney thinks his mobile phone gives him special powers.

A terrific blog post by Steven Hoober of Little Springs Design offered me inspiration this week. He starts:

Mobile is not iPhone or iPad or N8. It's not Bada or Symbian or WebOS. Mobile is not Opera Mini, or Skyfire or Netfront. Mobile is not sliders or clamshells, QWERTY or 12-key. Mobile is not touch, or multi-touch. Mobile is not Foursquare, or Facebook, or MySpace. Mobile is not Twitter. Mobile is not MMS, or BBM, or SMS. Mobile is not resolution or GPS, or front-facing-cameras. Mobile is not CDMA or GMRS, WiMax or LTE.

Mobile is not successful due to amazing marketing, or great pricing, or because it's fashionable. It's not even successful because it offers new capabilities to everyone, although it also does that.

Mobile is an unspeakable success because it lets people be people.


And he’s right. Everything that’s good about mobile technology is about the way it enhances our ability to be better human beings. We can communicate more often and more effectively. We can work more efficiently. We need never be alone. None of this technology matters for its own sake: it’s about what it lets us be and do.

I’d rather touch another person than the most incredible device imaginable. But that’s not to discount devices - and this is where I disagree slightly with Mr. Hoober. The amazing thing is that the device allows me to touch others, remotely. We become superhuman in our abilities with the aid of technology, but we don’t stop being human. People talk about the advent of augmented reality, but our reality is already augmented by the way our mobile devices allow us to do things people simply couldn’t twenty years ago.

When you leave your phone at home by mistake, that wrenching feeling in the pit of your stomach isn’t because you might miss an important message. It’s because you’ve been stripped of your powers. It’s Superman faced with Kryptonite.

It’s easy to forget that when you work closely with new models and new technologies. We get hung up on how many megapixels or megahertz. And of course those things are important - but it’s like comparing the ability to jump 30 feet into the air with the ability to jump 35 feet. I’d rather have the latter, but hey - did you see how high that guy could jump?

Nokia’s tagline is ‘Connecting People’, because that’s what’s core to what it does. Mobile is not - ultimately - a technology business. It’s a business about making people’s lives better.


News in Brief

Ovi Store apps for getting around - our pick of location-based services.

New services for Symbian developers appearing on Forum Nokia.

The Nokia X3 Touch and Type is launched. There’s also videos and an interview with Nokia EVP Mary McDowell about the new model.

An in-depth interview with Nokia design researcher Younghee Jung on her methods for finding out what people really want.

What do people care about more than battery life? The results are in.

Don’t forget to cast your vote in our latest poll - Touch and/or Type?

Ovi Store Chart

Here's what's hot at Ovi Store this week. Only one game in the top five? Some mistake, surely?

WikiHow Survival Kit
Search and read more than 60,000 articles

Ballz Free
Try 30 challenging & colorful levels of JezzBall fun

Kooaba Visual Search
Kooaba gives instant product information by image search

Morpho QuickPanorama
Take panorama photos with one-button capture

Recordoid
Recordoid allows recording voice notes in MP4, AAC, AMR & WAV

 

What you say
Each week we highlight one reader's comment right here in the newsletter. A number of you left some kind words upon the launch of the X3 Touch and Type this week. Horst Fuchs said:

That is such a great idea to combine the touch display and keep the possibility to use the keyboard. Pretty nice design. Good feature package including WLAN. Can’t wait to see the phone in the shops to try one.

Green Explorer
We’ve mentioned it previously on the blog, but it’s worth noting that Green Explorer finished its beta test stage this week. If you haven’t seen it yet, it’s a directory of places of eco-interest and a full-on blog site about green affairs. A mobile widget is also available on the Ovi Store so you can digest the content while you’re on the move.

Nokia World
There’s always a lot of speculation and excitement around the new products and services that may (or may not) be unveiled at Nokia World. Our lips are sealed, I’m afraid. But we’re starting to see blog posts appearing, guessing at what might turn up. Take this one for starters. Or may be it's this one. You'll only know for sure in September.

Multitasking Media
Mobile technology makes it easier than ever to do more than one thing at once. According to a story in the Guardian, British youngsters manage to cram nine-and-a-half hours of media consumption into six-and-a-half real hours. In the general population as a whole, media takes up 45% of our time.

Image credit: Xurble


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