I was reading this article
about DeNA, a Japanese mobile gaming start-up that plans to target the
US as its next market. One comment that the journalist made was that
"Americans, partly for cost reasons, typically use personal computers,
rather than cellphones, to play online games and surf the Web". This,
along with the fact that I was on the bus sitting behind a university
student typing away on her laptop, prompted me to think to myself what
my own usage was like.
Now, I have a Nokia E65, which when I bought it in mid-2007 was
billed as a "business phone" because it had Wi-Fi and an office suite
for working with documents. I have never, ever, not once used the
office suite. Not for want of trying, mind. When I buy something, I try
to squeeze every last cent of value from it. (Yes, I'm cheap.) But all
I remember is exploring the office suite once long ago, never figuring
out why it was important to me and then ignoring it completely
thereafter. Also, I do not own a TV. Yes, I do not own a TV and haven't
watched TV in ages, unless you count turning on hotel room TVs to watch
the beeb.
But this is all (mostly) an aside. What I was coming to was my
opinion about why people's usage of data on cellphones hasn't picked up
as much as we've all been expecting it to for so many years.
Is it speed? No, I don't think so. Phones are sufficiently fast today to permit convenient, casual surfing at least.
Is it price? Yes, perhaps, to an extent. I know I don't do much
more than read a couple of news articles on the way to work, but I do
have the option of using Wi-Fi on my phone when I'm at home. Which is
what I've been doing a lot of especially since I don't have TV. In that
situation, even though my access is free, I've found myself not
perusing the web as much as I'd like. Why?
Form factor: even though the E65 is a 3G phone and therefore, in
theory at least, meant for data, using it for more than a few minutes
at a time is just plain painful. I don't just mean eye strain; my arm
actually begins to tire holding the phone up in position constantly.
Even the buttons are getting to be a pain as my fingers gently begin to
cramp as I scroll down page after page.
And then there's the sheer lack of mobile-ready sites. Put yourself in the average enterprise user's shoes: he's not going to www.thisgreatnewssiteforyourmobile.com! Heck, he's not even going to news.google.com,
which could be expected to have a mobile-friendly layout (I've no idea
-- Google thought my E65 was a scary robot/virus/hacker so it wouldn't
let me view the page); he wants to go to the beeb or The Economist and
for it to just work. Which, of course, it doesn't. Instead, I find that
I only follow two sites now -- the NYT and the FT, both of which
have very good mobile sites (the NYT's is better). Happily, these are
also newspapers I respect. But what about The Economist? No mobile
version. The beeb? Ditto. I don't know how many other big-name sites
just don't work on mobiles, but this has to be a factor in people's
usage. Sure, CNN and IHT and others have great mobile sites, but I only
found that out because I'm very stubborn and am curious enough to first
Google mobile versions of popular sites on my computer, and then type in
their URLs into my phone using my little 12-button keypad. How many others would just
give up after trying superficially on the phone? Plenty, arguably.
And all this isn't even beginning to talk about those of us who need reading glasses.