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Confessions of a Mobility Addict
Today, few mobile phones can run for four hours if you run always connected GPRS applications
Shyamanuja Das
Friday, May 08, 2009
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Till a few days back, I was a zealous member of the growing community of people who swear by their mobile phones. I believed that those who were debating whether the PC or the mobile phone would be the primary access device for the Internet were still living in the stone age. I thought that debate had already been settled in the mobile phones favor long back.

I believed that in a country like India, it could act as the biggest change agent. IT could be an economic leveler helping the rural farmer; it could be the greatest socializing tool for the teenager; it could be the most important productivity tool for the executive. It could be many things to many people.

The rapid developments on the ground supported and enhanced my belief. Here was a company that demonstrated to me how it had implemented a solution where rural farmers had gained significantly by using mobile phone for auction. There was another which showed how the entire email could be backed up and accessed as and when needed through a mobile phone. One of Indias top two political parties promised that it would take the bank to the unbanked through mobile phones, in its election manifesto. Like most Indians, I am skeptical of promises made by political parties in general and their election manifestos in particular. Yet, this time I believed it and hailed it in the pages of this magazine.

My belief in mobile phones was not restricted to doing a special issue on mobile application companies in India in Dataquest or carrying more stories on them more regularly. In my personal life, I use mobile phones for everything that is possible. I use it to pay my bills, check my mails, get my way in a new location, socialize (almost all my updates on Facebook and linkedin are on my phone), play games (I have never done that in my PC in the last five years), not to talk of the numerous downloads! I have often been very critical of consumer companies that do not provide

But I now believe probably, my faith in the power of mobile phones was a little misplaced.

Yes, numerous small firms around the world may have created really innovative applications to tap the power of mobile phone. Numerous users around the world may have given a thumbs up to those efforts by actively using those. But a handful of companies still make the phone hardware. And they have done very little to keep pace when it comes to battery life. If that does not happen, all the great applications are meaningless.

Today, few mobile phones can run for four hours if you run always connected GPRS applications. If you are in a remote location, and think you can find your way by using GPS, you can probably get maps. But your phones battery will let you down. If you are traveling in a long-distance train that does not provide a socket to charge the phone, you can hardly use online applications, despite the fact that these days you get good GPRS connectivity almost everywhere on the way. If only the battery could last beyond three hours!

It is a terrible feeling. On one hand, you are always discovering new ways of using the mobile phone. On the other, you are always living with the fear that any moment your battery will go down. Then, all these innovations seem so meaningless.

By the time I have realized this, as a user, I think I have gone a little too ahead along the mobility path to retract back. And that thought makes me desperate.

But I still have a lot of faith in the technology communitys ability to solve this problem. Do you?

Shyamanuja Das
The author is Editor of Dataquest.
shyamanujad@cybermedia.co.in

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