Microsoft Spins Off ZenZui, Mobile Browsing Via Widgets
From the looks of the promotional video (see top of post) you can zoom all the way into one widget and as far out as a 4×4 grid of widgets. Zooming and panning around the grid is controlled by your touch screen (if you’re so lucky) or the number pad (for the rest of us). Although it’s currently available only on Windows Mobile devices, they aim to have Java 2ME and BREW versions later this year.
The whole service is a a clever way to increase deck placement on mobile phones. Deck placement is the set of default applications that come on mobile phones. It’s the most coveted space on your mobile and distribution through deck placement makes or breaks most mobile apps. Currently deck placement is hard to come by because it’s determined by carriers at the highest levels and often includes some revenue sharing. ZenZui application has essentially turned one spot into 36 (they hope to make it 1000).
This would all be well and good if ZenZui wasn’t essentially doing the same thing carriers are doing right now, charging for placement. You see, ZenZui isn’t a new way to surf the web on your phone, but rather a new way to surf ZenZui’s web on your phone. It’s all elegantly summed up in this chart showing marketers and developers piping content into your phone.
Each of the 36 spots currently included with ZenZui are powered by content partners, such as Zillow, Eventful, Kayak, OTOlabs, Avenue A, Razorfish and Traffic.com. They will be monetized using “well-established advertising principles like CPA and CPM (we call it CPZ – Cost Per Zoom)”. To encourage development, ZenZui will split ad revenue with widget developers. Widget developers can also choose to release an ad-free version, which will display messages from non-profits instead.
ZenZui is a step in the right direction. It removes yet more control of mobile phone “real estate” from the carriers, but it still inserts an unnecessary cost into the process, advertising. It is our belief that mobile phone platforms should move in the direction of open standards, which have benefited desktop computing platforms so much.
Blupulse is another widget platform (most likely will be ad supported). More open mobile widget platforms are Nokia’s Widset, and Opera. These platforms face the same hurdle of making the first jump onto people’s phones, but that will grow easier and easier as they more easily connect with our desktops.