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Mobile
phone service provider, Birla AT&T, announced
the launch of a messaging informatoion service,
'Mssngr,' to its 2,00,000 subscribers in
Maharashtra, Goa and Gujarat, on the low cost
SMS channel.
'Mssngr' is powered by technology from wireless
application service provider, iSolv, which
had recently launched mChat (mobile chat),
another wireless mobile technology. This will
make a range of value added data services accessible
to the wireless carrier subscriber.
The new service, available in chat-mode, will
be extended in three phases. The first will allow
basic person-to-person messaging connectivity;
the second from person-to-Internet and the third
will be with sites, which give specific information.
Talks are on with entities like HDFC and NDTV,
for the same purpose. Initially, the information
will be of the "lighter" category,
such as jokes, horoscope, and banking, said Rajat
Mukarji, Vice President, Business Development,
Birla AT&T, at the launch of the service
in Pune.
Mr Mukarji said that all AT&T subscribers
would have a dedicated email account. Over the
next couple of months, some of the services that
would be added to the range would be banking,
downloading tunes, graphics, (which would be handset
dependent), interactive games, railway schedules,
airlines schedules, and in fact all the 'yellow
page' information services.
"The 'Mssngr' service comes as a combination
of connecting the wireless world with the Internet
world," says iSolv MD, Milind Agnihotri.
"The power comes from harnessing content
and marrying it to mobile technology, and bringing
those applications to the end user device. Essentially,
it's bringing the power of mobility to the Internet."
"It would be possible to pick up and choose
any HTML content, strip them of the colour and
audio, and bring them over as messages,"
added Mr Agnihotri.
Initially, AT&T has pegged the cost at Rupee
one per outgoing message for the sender, while
incoming messages will be kept free. Mr Mukarji
believes the competitive cost band will help attract
users and traffic, and increase volumes. In his
opinion, the volumes would be staggering once
the services and applications grow. He cited the
experience of UK where messaging services had
peaked to ten billion messages per month, spread
across ten million subscribers and that of Philippines,
where the subscriber base jumped from 1.8 million
to 3.6 million over a nine month span after messaging
service was introduced. Once the slew of services
is all in place, Mr Mukarji anticipates a user
rate of 100 messages per month on an average.
AT&T is slated to add a number of services,
including specifically programmed 'alerts', such
as regular updates on stock portfolio prices,
cricket scores, news flashes, etc, so that their
services will be 'highly interactive and real
time'. Mr Agnihotri opined, that with the evolution
of newer wireless technologies such as WAP, GPRS
and 3G (and the concomitant tightening of security
in the Internet arena), services would move further
up the value chain. These would be fund transfer,
stock trade, and new applications such as multimedia,
images, audio, even voiced animated messages.
As Mr Mukarji observes, "The mobile phone
is fast moving from being a ear-piece into an
eye-piece." Soon you can expect to find people
clutching cell phones, not to their ears but focusing
in front, before their eyes."
Contact: Birla AT&T on 543 2001
Text: Rahul Surkund |