All posts under tagged ‘Qik’

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Qik Is Hot

Source: andyabramson.blogs.com

Check out David Sarno’s LA Times story on what many a blogger has already known. Qik is it in one way video streaming.

Personally I love the phone Jason’s using..it’s a Nokia N95 (you insiders will know why)…

Published on March 23rd, 2008 under , ,

Wednesday Links: ShoreTel and IBM, Open Source Applications Ranked, Qik

Source: www.voip-news.com

Virtual Hosting Blog ranks the top 50 open source VoIP applications . . . Check it out here.

The VoIP Weblog tells us about Qik: a program that lets you upload and stream realtime video from certain phones . . . how cool. And it recently captured a marriage proposal. Find out more here.

The OTHER VoIP News tells us about ShoreTel and IBM collaborating on a unified communications solution. Read about it here.

Published on March 19th, 2008 under , , , , , , ,

Bhaskar Roy: Qik should be a part of Nokia’s Ovi

Source: goebel.net

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Qik is one of the greatest mobile internet applications I know. You just start the software on a Nokia N95, and yet you are broadcasting live video to everyone over the internet. Have a look at my company’s Qik stream at Mogulus if you want to see the next transmission.

I immediately thought that this kind of live video broadcast is the last feature that’s missing on Nokia’s social platform Ovi. There you can already share photos, videos, comments and blog entries in more than 100 file formats. "We support nearly every existing file format, said Serena Glover, Director Service Operations, Connect New Experiences at Nokia and ex CEO of Twango in an interview with me at the Mobile World Congress 2008 in Barcelona. But Ovi always keeps you waiting for your friends to upload a new video. You can’t just tune when it’s still being filmed. It feels more like Blockbuster video than real television. Unlike Qik, which lets you broadcast and see events while they are still happening.

"Absolutely! Qik should be a part of Ovi", therefore said Qik’s VP Marketing and co-founder Bhaskar Roy when we talked in Barcelona. He also related how venture capitalists are competing to do his company’s second round of funding. Our chat was very interesting and insightful. Who had thought that this Silicon Valley company is mostly based in Russia? While India born Bhaskar and his friend Ramu Sunkara run Qik together with some other Stanford graduates from the Californian city of Santa Clara, most of their employees live and work in Moscow. Nilolay Abkairov, who was a former speech codec developer for Skype mobile, and his team are busily porting Qik to all smartphone platforms.

His friend Alexi handles the video streaming issues, which make use of quite nifty technologies: The handset shoots the video as MPEG4 and immediately streams it as H.263 over a 3G or Wifi connection to Qik’s server. There it’s being transcoded into Flash for Qik’s website or into a Realvideo stream for mobile handsets. "Qik is developing a new live streaming to other mobile handsets, says Bhaskar. "You won’t even need a browser to watch a livestream. We send a Realvideo stream directly to your friends’ cell phones."

So soon the cell phone will not only be a camera but also a tv set. Everyone is a sender and a receiver at the same time if he has the right handset. "Qik works on all S60 platforms and a version for UIQ is in development, says Bhaskar. "A version for Windows Mobile will be launched soon. Their aim is to make Qik work on every possible camera phone. That’s why the team in Santa Clara is also developing a Java client for cheaper handsets. They even tested Qik successfully on phones with just 100 Megahertz CPU and only an EDGE connection to the mobile internet. "Qik consist of a layer that’s different for every platform and a platform independent layer, explains Bhaskar. "That’s why it takes only some weeks to port Qik to a new platform."

So while the future looks technologically bright for Qik, I asked Bhaskar how his company wants to earn money. Until now the service is free and Nokia hasn’t made an offer yet. "In this year we will only concentrate on consumer acquisition, is his answer. Advertising on Qik’s website would be easy to implement, like Google does it on Youtube. Also companies could sponsor certain channels on the website. "We could also offer value added services for very cheap prices like $1 per month", says Bhaskar. As an example for a premium service he mentions privacy. Until now every video appears directly on Qik’s starting page as soon as you activate the camera. Every stranger can see it until you switch off or hit the "0 key.

Published on February 29th, 2008 under , , , , , ,

Great contacts and exclusive information from the Mobile World Congress 2008

Source: goebel.net

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The Mobile World Congress (MWC) 2008 in Barcelona was a great event. Thanks to Andy Abramson and the Nokia Blog relations program I met a lot of interesting fellow bloggers. My pal Alec Saunders was so nice to make a listing of the people we met:

Some of the great people and bloggers I bumped into at the show include Stowe Boyd, Darla Mack, Jonathan Greene, Matt Miller, Alan Reiter, Oliver Starr, Bill Tam, Lubna Dajani (get that blog going, Lubna!), Esme Vos, Martin Geddes, Dean Bubley, Xen Mendelsohn, Martyn Davies, Jonathan Zar, Loren Feldman (and it was me who mistook him for Ze Frank), Markus Goebel, Jeb Brilliant, James Body, Florian Seroussi, Daniel Appelquist and of course Pat Phelan. You can read more about the show on any of their blogs.

I would like to thank especially Martyn Davies from the VOIPSA blog. He gave me great hints to prepare my interview with Fring’s CEO Avi Shechter - who was so kind to say that he is a regular reader of this blog, although he doesn’t always share my opinion. Also the Cellity founders Sarik Weber and Tim von Trne outed themselves as regular followers. And Michael Poppler, European region sales manager of VoIP solution provider GIPS, even jumped out of his booth when he recognized my name on the MWC badge, saying that he always wanted to get to know me.

Thank you very much for this feedback!

It was the first time in a long period that I left my cave in Berlin from where I maintain contact to the IT industry largely by internet and phone. The next opportunity to meet me is a the CeBIT trade fair in Hannover. Needless to say that I brought lots of exclusive information back home from Barcelona. I will cover it in my next blog entries. Great changes are coming and some of the most pestering problems in mobile VoIP will be solved soon. (Not only that Packet8 made their MobileTalk a free product as I always advocated.) Some companies have have discovered new business models or changed their technology, but didn’t announce it yet.

Most fun was my interview with Qik’s co-founder Bhaskar Roy. His company is so hot that one venture capitalist even asked me to convince Bhaskar that he wants to do Qik’s second round of funding. Qik should turn down all other offers. That’s certainly a great way of living: Being haunted by rich people who compete to give you their money. But Qik deserves it. You just switch on the Nokia N95 and yet your face is broadcasted on the internet. Just look at the morons on Qik’s start page who still don’t realize that they are online and everyone can see them! My tip from Bhaskar: Dial zero and your broadcast switches immediately into privacy mode. Too sad that my Qik interview with Cellity just disappeared. Although Bhaskar had said that I could do it in offline mode and it would be uploaded automatically from the phone the next time I connected to Qik over Wifi.

Published on February 21st, 2008 under , , , , ,

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