Archive for the ‘Uncategorized’ Category

Mobile Payments 2009 at The Forum, The Campus, Bryanston


2009
11.03

And the light dims as the presentations are to start – two days of presentations on mobile payments and payment mechanisms. Featuring Paul Stemmet from MXit, Aletha Ling from Fundamo, Adrian Vermooten from ABSA who compares the pros and cons of the operator vs the banking-centric business model for mobile payments, let’s hope that the presentations and the stay up here in the city of thunderstorms and bad bad driving is worth it…


Update: So far, the presentations from Paul, and the POCiT presentation on the basic factors and segmentation considerations of mobile payers have been worth it. Key quote:

Is your solution a headache or a vitamin tablet?

People will borrow money to buy a headache tablet, but only when they have spare cash will they splash out on vitamins…


Update: So ABSA sends about 1bn messages a year, now with more than 500 000 users on USSD gained via the last 8 months. Seems as though they NotifyMe system has been a good mechanism of getting users used to the mobile phone as a ‘trusted banking device’. May be worth looking a megau.mobi and absabank.mobi and absahome.mobi where they process around 1000 logins per minute as capture interfaces with large amounts of information required.

It takes less than 2minutes to register for a Funeral Plan via the ABSA mobile platform

… seeing that the ambulance will take 10min or more to get there…?


Update: After the Atos Origin (IT partners for the Summer and Winter Olymptics) presentation on their TESSA platform (including Bluetooth stickers), the SA Reserve Bank gave insight.

Through their South African Multiple Option Select System, they clear on average R300bn/day, with Oct 2008 seeing R8.4tn for that month. On the definition of e-money (seeing that they were presenting on the South African National Payment System, specifically on their E-Money Position Paper ("out in two weeks"), airtime is not considered a "currency" of any type as it’s barter in a free-market economy. E-money should be considered as currency issued by an issuer on the receipt of funds, accepted by receipients other than the issuer and redeemable for cash or bank deposit.

Currently, in South Africa, accepting a deposit for later repayment is the business of the bank and hence a criminal offence by a non-bank. Say you buy a store card for R 500 and have the cashier pay out R 200 out of the card — that’s currently illegal as it is using the card as a redeemable, cashable store of value.

That is the business of the bank as their main use is related to receipt of funds not for on-payment (on-payment is fine if the recipient is due funds – that’s why you can pay for a fine or rates at a Pick ‘n’ Pay or Shoprite) to third parties. The paper to be issued is a position paper (opion and interpretation by the SARB), not a directive (which becomes a ‘restrictive’ law).

Currently, deposit receipt is only possible in conjunction with a bank. In future, a model similar to the one the Financial Serices Authority (FSA) in the UK is using in having a multi-tier approach, where an "e-currency" may be issued:

  • 1st tier: Bank
  • 2nd tier: less than £25mil
  • 3rd tier: less than £1mil, for a geographically restricted area, with business plan and 6-monthly report-back

Remissions Currently, PayPal could pay remissions (money paid back across borders, typicially by migrant workers…) if they applied for a banking licence; currently, though, they do not comply with the Foreign Exchange Control or the Banks Acts in South Africa. That’s why using Paypal cannot be ‘cashed in’ in South Africa. "Because they don’t want to" according to the SARB.

Malawi, Botswana, Angloa and Malawi are currently the most expensive remission destinations in the world, and the SARB is investgating methods of working on the remission costs. But that is in the future.

Isn’t it an issue if people buy less oranges and more airtime? — No, that’s the free market.


Update: ukash presented their offering, where PIN-encoded value stores are purchased in real currency and can then be transferred as far afield as Uruguay, Russia (as from today), Australia and South Africa (Pick n Pay -> wantitall, bidorbuy) – via mail, SMS, forum or other. Very popular in Pakistan and the Middle East, redeemable for things like Skype vouchers etc. Reminds me of the Security Summit 2009 presentation on the Underworld Economy… They were hit by £ 500 000 fraud in Sept 2008 due to monetarisation of their vouchers…

Serving video off the cloud


2009
10.26

The website for Love never Dies features three videos, one of the Coney Island Waltz, and the other of the press release of the musical by Andrew Lloyd Webber. However, the video, run via the jquery plugin of an SWF video player is being served off http://cloudfront.loveneverdies.com. Which is in the cloud. (more…)

Google Lab’s FastFlip – Hyperlinked Slideshow?


2009
09.15

Google Labs launched FastFlip – a good example is the “Centre for Investigative Reporting” site.

So you can flip between pages that are rendered and pre-loaded as graphics (PNGs, avg 40kB, 634px by 884px) without incurring the (X)HTML load-times, and all the underlying elements. See the page you like, and then click on the one you choose to have it actually load. The basis is a pre-render that is then flipped through like a slideshow with hyperlinks. Problem is dynamic and ad-generating links on the source documents that will lose their value – you won’t click twice on a link of interest if you know that, on second thoughts, this may be ads rather than content. In addition to which, you incur 404‘s following pages form the preview. Some work… You can’t click on the link you want to follow — you click and it takes you to the page, and then you have to click again… Isn’t that removing a level of “hype” from the “hyperlink”? :)

(more…)

Another old favourite is back


2009
06.22

http://www.synch.co.za is back (after a sabbatical of some time) so everything’s all happy again on the site, as well as on http://synch.co.za — in the meantime, only the URL synch.cc had been active.

It’s been a while! :)

Over a trillion unique URLs in Google (but you knew that already)


2008
07.26

On the Google Blog, they’ve been going on about the size of the Google index that’s grown at such great speed over the time of Google

The first Google index in 1998 already had 26 million pages, and by 2000 the Google index reached the one billion mark. Over the last eight years, we’ve seen a lot of big numbers about how much content is really out there. Recently, even our search engineers stopped in awe about just how big the web is these days — when our systems that process links on the web to find new content hit a milestone: 1 trillion (as in 1,000,000,000,000) unique URLs on the web at once!

Now, the whole thing about unique URLs they go on to qualify later, going on about a potential infinate quantity of links on the web, like ‘next month’ links and the like. Sure. But what abou the specifically google-tailored and subdomain cross-linked ‘SEO’ domains? I’m sure we can take out a margin of errors of 30% – 35% of auto-generated pages, links and domains.

But this example shows that the size of the web really depends on your definition of what’s a useful page, and there is no exact answer.

So they don’t index every page. Real content vs google-specific content…

I think it may be safe to simply agree that the index is big. Very big. With lots of lots of pages. There’s not much point in going on about the number.

ex Lightedge, Ends On… (but you knew that already)


2008
07.23

Just as a quick follow-up to the previous post about ex-Lightedge vs Ends On earlier this week, guess who I received an unsolicited email from today! Yup, you guessed it – seems like old mailing lists are being reused to drum up support for the new business… either those bought – or inherited? And if none of the two, that’s spam… but you knew that already.

Makes you wonder – what do you pack if you need to leave home (or the office…) in a rush? Seems like the lesson is to take along your base to sell from in future. Mere unfounded speculation, mind you…

Aaaaaaaaaaaanyway…