Archive for the ‘mobile technology’ Category

Second attempt to download the GPS collar data

Thursday, November 26th, 2009

After some phone calls with the manufacturer “Followit” in Sweden, they advised us to separate the collar from the battery, and leave both components on a warm spot to dry. Since the display notification was still on, it was likely that the data was in the collar was safe… But it would be to time consuming to send the collar to Sweden, and have it downloaded in the factory. So we had to try to get it out here. After using some force, we managed to separate the two and leave them to dry.

091126collar02

At least I could do now something and hope!

091126collar

Tijmen tests the cow collar

Friday, December 19th, 2008

081219collar.jpg

Heineken also goes following trucks…

Wednesday, December 5th, 2007

This news was a bit of a surprise because it resembles so much to our own NomadicMILK. According to Dutch tech lifestyle site Bright (in Dutch only), one of the world’s largest beer brewer Heineken (#4 says Wikipedia.org) has stepped into locative platform Bliin for their newest marketing campaign. Heineken truckers who deliver beer to their customers can be followed live on the map via the Bliin website. People playing this game may win prizes if they predict where the delivery men will go for their next stop.

(picture source:

Bright) 

Bliin is a locative platform. Bliin enables users to take geo-annotated pictures with their mobile phone cam and share these experiences with others via the internet (”geotagging”). Bliin also makes it possible to locate people and their preferences, and trace users movements live on the map (”social proximity”). Registered users install a small Java program on their mobile device. They need a GPS receiver, either integrated into the phone or standalone (e.g. via bluetooth). Their position is sent to the Bliin server in realtime over an always-on data connection. Users can capture photos with their mobile phone camera (in the future also audio, video and text) and attach description and tags. When users publish the photo, GPS coordinates are automatically attached. It appears as a geographically positioned photo on the Bliin web interface, based on Google Maps.

First of all, I find it interesting that big companies are now stepping into the ‘locative thing’ as well. Is it a way to reach new (young?) customers? Further, some more philosophical questions are what happens when routes and experiences of place become visualized in a  play-like manner, as happens in locative game like this? Do our spatial perceptions and social relations change when we learn to understand movement as a trace on a bird-eye view map, when we learn through geo-annnotations that every place is already pre-inscribed by other people’s experiences, and when social proximity is mediated by mobile technologies?

Nigerian minister of finance on mobile phone market

Friday, June 1st, 2007

(via SmartMobs)

Former Nigerian minister of finance Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala promotes investing in Africa. On of the interesting examples she gives is the privatization and rapid growth of the telecom market in Nigeria, from 4300 landlines to over 32 million mobile phone subscriptions. Although she doesn’t mention the name, there is clearly a sense of “Glo with Pride” in her talk. Glo is a domestic mobile phone enterprise coming up second to South-African MTN and growing. Their slogan is appealing to Nigerian pride: “we can do it ourselves”.


(click to enlarge)

Skip to the section starting at 8:00 where she talks about the telecom and mobile phone market in Nigeria:

Biological fuel for mobile phone antennas in Africa

Thursday, October 12th, 2006

NomadicMILK

Blog has been silent for a while, which in my case is an indication of doing lots of things at the moment..:). This post on textually.org I found interesting, since media artist Esther Polak and I will be going to Africa (Nigeria) in a couple of weeks for the art/science project NomadicMILK. It’s a project about mobility patterns amongst nomadic Fulani herdsmen and WAMCO truck drivers. We will be traveling with cultural anthropologist Ab Drent, who has done a 10-month research amongst the Fulani in northern Cameroon in 2000/2001.

We will try to visualize to uses of space by both nomads and truckers by means of GPS and find out whether the use of the mobile phone influences their use and experience of space. There is  a preliminary website for the project NomadicMILK with more info about the project.

Anyway, here’s the article:

Pumpkin power dawns for African mobile phone networks
Palm and pumpkin seed oil could soon be generating electricity to help power mobile phone networks across Africa under a plan to replace fossil fuels with sustainable biofuels made from crops grown by local farmers. Reuters reports.
"Swedish telecoms networks group Ericsson and South African cellphone operator MTN said on Wednesday they want to start replacing diesel with biofuels in electricity generating stations powering mobile phone base stations in rural Africa.

"Swedish telecoms networks group Ericsson and South African cellphone operator MTN said on Wednesday they want to start replacing diesel with biofuel in electricity generating stations powering mobile phone base stations in rural Africa."

Via textually.org

——- update ———
Mobileafrica confirms that several players work on a pilot project in NIgeria:

The MTN Group, the GSM Association and Ericsson have teamed up to establish biofuels as an alternative source of power for wireless networks in the developing world. The three organisations have set up a pioneering project in Nigeria to demonstrate the potential of biofuels to replace diesel as a source of power for mobile base stations located beyond the reach of the electricity grid.