Tracking the tools that decentralize the media. tools process ideas resources eventsav

unmediated

 

November 07, 2005

C/Net and the Washington Post report that Google and Yahoo are rolling out new services for wireless devices.

Starting today, cell phones can access Google Maps. Google's application can be used on more than 100 current phones that use the Java Brew programming language that can download the Google Local application. From there, they can conduct searches in a specific location and view results plotted on a map.

Google's application and service is free, but users will need an Internet data plan from their cellphone provider, which adds $10 to $25 to monthly bills. Google Mobile and Yahoo Mobile currently provides search on cell phones, but the services are more text oriented.

Google Maps is getting some competition from Yahoo Maps Beta. Local maps have geoRSS feed for searches, showing local traffic conditions, for example. The default view is Flash-based, with an Ajax version of the API available.

Yahoo will introduce its own cell phone, through a partnership with SBC. Operating on the Cingular Wireless network, the phone will link music, photos and e-mail with consumers' existing online Yahoo accounts, address books and preferences. It have an MP3 player, a 1.3-megapixel camera and a removable memory card. The SBC/Yahoo phone will be manufactured by Nokia and is expected to be available early next year for $200 to $300.

Meanwhile, Yahoo and TiVo are teaming up to blend TV and the Web. The service will allow TiVo users to program their DVRs remotely using Yahoo's web site.

Starting Monday, Yahoo TV offers show times, program descriptions and cast photographs as well as exclusive content like information from "Entertainment Tonight" and others. Subscribers with a TiVo Series2 box and a standard Yahoo ID may use the service, the companies said.

TiVo has some 254,000 subscribers, down from 288,000 a year earlier. Key to that drop was a 5 percent decline in new customers from DirecTV, its biggest source of new customers, which has said it plans to cease marketing TiVo's product.

Google is rumored to be interested in advertising via tv but has not announced any definitive plans.


Originally posted by samc from Daily Wireless, remediated by yatta on Nov 7, 2005 at 02:24 PM