May 28, 2009 @ 11:40 am - Filed under: Mobile - Tags: , Comments

(or lots of these other “webOS” platforms)

So the other day while at Mobile Monday Miami (disclosure, I’m on the executive committee) someone asked if I was going to start porting my apps to Palm’s new Pre platform. I responded with a resounding NO, maybe too hastily, but I still stand by my response.palm-pre-2

So why am I not building anything for the Palm Pre, even though the apps are all going to be HTML + Javascript (right up my teams area of expertise)? Well Palm isn’t building a global platform out of this phone from what I can tell. They paired up with sprint, which is fast declining as the number 3 carrier in the USA, which means fewer and fewer potential customers. Secondly the pre is built on a CDMA chipset (supposedly a gsm version is in the works, but palm is slow w/these things) which limits the number of markets they can sell it to (USA, Japan, S.Korea are the 3 big cdma markets, and this phone is too basic to catch fire in Japan or Korea). So being limited to Sprint customers and those paying the $99/month fee at that seems like a small market, maybe 100-200k users in the next year. Compare that to the iPod Touch/iPhone market of over 30 million, and it seems to me like a no-brainer which to invest in.

So you might be thinking, well its cheaper to build for the Pre, and theoretically building for the Pre is the same as building for the web right? Well the Pre is only the first handset in Palm’s WebOS plan, so we don’t know if the future handsets will have the same specs, or dimensions, or capabilities, so making apps becomes more fractured. iPhone development is simple, all the phones or iPods have the same screen resolution, same capabilities, and are uniform worldwide. As a web developer who has been building web apps for a decade, hassling with all the different browsers and operating system nuances has been a royal pain, and the last thing I want to do is deal with 5 different phone configurations which serve maybe a few thousand users.

Now if Palm sends me a few unlocked PREs with free data/phone cards in them, I’ll happily dive more into it and let you all know what i think, but realistically that same offer would apply to Google with their Android (which I could talk about later and have many similar gripes).

In the end it all boils down to a cost per user acquisition, and costs to support each user. In a bootstrap economy, we’ve all got to take those things into consideration.

UpdateI was pointed to this link that @whurley(who is a kick-ass community leader in texas) posted about his experiences with palm. Worth the read. via @mherzber. Also worth reading is @giovanni’s reaction to Pre.

May 27, 2009 @ 12:07 pm - Filed under: Sports - Tags: , , , , , , Comments

For years the discussion has been who will be the heir apparent to the Michael Jordan throne, who will be the next superstar. For years it was clearly Kobe, then Lebron came into the league 5 years ago and the discussion shifted to which of the two would emerge as the top player. Both players sporting their ridiculous shoe and drink endorsement deals, pulling down league maximum salaries, and selling merchandise worldwide like you wouldn't believe.  So now the league NEEDS these two to be in the finals against each other. This is the ultimate ... Continue reading

May 25, 2009 @ 9:57 am - Filed under: Miami - Tags: , , , Comments

A few people have been discussing the idea of turning Coconut Grove, my favorite neighborhood in Miami, into a tech hub. This is actually an interesting idea, as it would favor both techies and the grove in its effort to revitalize itself.  There are two ways this issue can ... Continue reading

May 19, 2009 @ 9:30 am - Filed under: Predictions - Tags: , Comments

... Continue reading

May 18, 2009 @ 9:58 am - Filed under: Social - Tags: , , , Comments

First step, secure your reputation online. WHAT? Yes, because the first thing I am going to do is google you. You think I'm joking? But I bet that 90% of employers do this, and maybe 5% of employees realize it. So start by registering your domain (your fullname.com, and avoid .info or .biz), and setup some cheap hosting for it.   Once you've finished this, you aren't done with step one, ... Continue reading

May 6, 2009 @ 7:47 pm - Filed under: Advertising - Tags: , , , , , , , Comments

Blogs - A self published journal, newsletter, etc. Usually supports visitor comments/feedback, rss, and trackbacks. Do you need one? Only if you have customers whom you want to talk to, and value their opinion (these opinion things, are pretty important these days). If you are writing an email or physical newsletter you send out everymonth, you should be re-publishing this as a blog on your domain/site. Also things you find too minute for newsletter publishing, but are still useful or valua ... Continue reading

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Brian Breslin
You are reading the home page of Brian Breslin, a web strategist from Miami, FL. I'm currently CEO of Infinimedia, a multi national web consultancy specializing in social media. {read more}
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