Archive for the ‘Moket’ Category

Goodbye Moket

Posted 24 Dec 2009 — by Dale
Category Appland, Moket, Personal

I’ve often thought about the day that I would write this blog post, wondered what I would be feeling and how to sum up 5 eventful years in a single entry. Now that it’s here, I’m feeling relieved, excited, sad, anxious, privileged, and relaxed … what a combination!

In January 2010 I’ll be winding up the daily activity of my company Moket, after accepting an offer to take up a new position as Experience Architect at Vodafone Hutchison Australia.

The decision to re-enter the workforce after 9 years of running my own businesses (Moket + DRD Interactive) was of course not taken lightly. There were many contributing factors, and I won’t bore you with all of them, but instead pick out some of the more important ones.

Firstly, running your own business is hard, hard work. Especially if you’re out on the bleeding edge of something new, as Flash Lite was in 2004 when I started Moket. As many of you will appreciate, I’ve invested a huge amount of time, effort, cash and emotion into Moket and the various business models we pursued to try and monetize Flash Lite development in those early years. Working in a start-up takes a toll on you and also your family, and mine certainly rode the roller-coaster with me the whole way.

Trying to create a mobile ecosystem around an early technology like Flash Lite certainly had its challenges. Whether it was device penetration, industry support (or lack thereof in the pre-app-store days), player features or lack of synchronicity with the rest of the Flash Platform, there was always a hurdle that needed to be jumped. And of course we jumped over many of them, only to find more on the other side. This is true though of many start-up ventures and nothing to complain about really (cause it’s what you expect), but it was particularly true of Flash Lite. I look back on it now with Flash Player 10.1 on our doorstep, and wonder if I wasn’t 4-5 years too early – but hey, you always need early adopters!

While the Flash Lite train chugged along, my life also started to move into a new phase. My youngest daughter is starting school next year, making 3 kids at school and needing all the things that school-kids need. The time had come to re-evaluate the idea that Moket was started on (Flash mobile development), to see if the business still had something to offer, and to see if I was personally ready (along with my wife) to continue to commit to the burden of owning a business based on a platform that had not delivered what we had hoped. The answer, most importantly to the last question, was no. The time had come to look to see what I could achieve with a larger company, and using the experiences, skills, knowledge and contacts that I had developed throughout the life of Moket.

As you’ll appreciate, 2009 has not been a stellar year for switching jobs (losing them, yes, but starting new ones, no), especially when you’re coming out of running your own company for so long. After a fair amount of searching, praying, phone calls and emails, I’ve been able to secure a fantastic position that really takes advantage of (nearly) everything I’ve done with Moket, and pushes me into new directions as well.

My official title is Experience Architect at the newly merged Australian telco, Vodafone Hutchison Australia (VHA). The role however is a lot broader than the title suggests. I will be leading and managing a team of designers and developers, focused on creating and delivering innovative smartphone applications to customers. We will be focused initially on the iPhone, with Android, Blackberry and other platforms into the future. I’ll have the task of setting the vision and applications roadmap, strategic initiatives and performance measures.It’s like a small start-up venture inside of a corporate (however VHA feels like a start-up itself in many ways, only bigger!), so I’m very excited to be taking a senior role in the context of this new aspect of their business.

The position is also based in Sydney, so my family will be relocating in time for the kids to start at a new school. Quite the adventure for us all!

“But where is Flash?”, I hear you ask? Good question! I see Flash (FP10.1, Flex Mobile Framework, AIR) as playing a role with my new team – exactly what that role is I’m yet to determine! It could be with exploring the various ways in which we can use the unified Flash Platform to extend the reach of certain applications, or perhaps using it as a rapid prototyping tool for apps that will ultimately be built using native SDK’s … like I said, I’m not sure yet :) With that in mind though, I’ll certainly be staying “inside” the Flash mobile community and won’t be disappearing completely into the App Store just yet!

There are too may people to thank here, but I’ll be reaching out personally to those of you who have played a major role in Moket and my work in the Flash mobile community. My Moket email will remain active for some time, and I’m still on LinkedIn and Twitter for keeping in touch. I’ll also continue blogging and hopefully conference speaking where possible and appropriate, so not much will change from that perspective.

And finally … I wish all of you a very happy and safe Christmas, and all the best for the new year!

Flash Panels customise the homescreen for the Sony Ericsson X2

Posted 02 Oct 2009 — by Dale
Category Development, Mobile, Moket

PunkyPanel_2

The Sony Ericsson X2 was announced a little while ago, and recently I’ve been fortunate enough to have been able to do some work on an early release version. It’s a nifty device – Windows Mobile 6.5, 800 x 480 touch display, and this feature called “Panels”.

Panels are applications that can assigned as the “homescreen” of the device, and have full interactivity with the hardware. They can be written as C++, HTML/JavaScript, OpenGL ES, Native Windows Mobile, JavaME, Capuchin or Flash Lite 3 applications, and can access features of the device OS such as launching applications (like Email, Messaging, Calendar, Settings) or reporting missed calls, calender events, unread emails or SMS. The “panelization”" of content is a very simple process once you’ve optimised the content for use on the homescreen, and essentially packages your content into a CAB file that is installed over ActivSync to your device.

The good news (apart from all of that so far) is that the PlayNow Arena “app store” for Sony Ericsson will be soon featuring a category for Panels, so developers can monetize these homescreen applications. One that I hope makes it into PlayNow is the “Punky Panel” that I’ve developed (pictured above), and later in October I’ll be doing a video on the development process of creating the application using Flash Lite 3.

Moket receives funding from Open Screen Fund

Posted 23 Sep 2009 — by Dale
Category Business, Development, Moket

I’m very happy to announce that Moket has secured funding from the Open Screen Fund, to further development of one of our mobile games in the works, currently titled “Pocket Mogul”. The game will be using several of Nokia’s S60 Platform Services for Flash Lite, and will be initially designed for s60 5th Edition touch-screen devices (screenshot for demo only – not the final game) before being ported to any supported key-based and other devices.

Screen for demo only - not the real game!

I’ll be releasing some more details on the game itself in the coming weeks, particularly once my Adobe MAX commitments are wrapped up, but at this stage I’d like to thank Nokia and Adobe for coming on board with the project. I’m looking forward to being able to bring to market something a little different for Flash Lite games, and it’s always great to be supported during the creation of original IP. Stay tuned!

Ovi Reports are Back – New Moket Ovi Sales Figures

Posted 13 Jul 2009 — by Dale
Category Business, Moket

A little while back I suggested that I would try and be forthcoming with our sales numbers through Ovi so that the Flash development community could see what was happening behind the scenes with us on this new sales channel. This certainly wasn’t to say that I thought Moket’s content would be the biggest selling through the store (far from it) but I thought it would be helpful since we have been in the Ovi Store from the start.

As some of you will know, Ovi’s reporting screens were removed for quote some time while they were “fixed”, and have just become available again over the weekend. Here’s what I can show you now in terms of how things have been progressing for us: Read More

Some early Ovi traffic/sales indicators

Posted 01 Jun 2009 — by Dale
Category Business, Mobile, Moket

Ovi hasn’t even been live for a week, but I’m noticing an interesting trend already in sales numbers from Moket’s own content. If you’ve read my previous blog, you’ll know that I feel there are some issues particularly with browsing the Ovi desktop website that are preventing consumers from having the best experience.

One of those issues is that by default, the website assumes you have the Nokia 5800 Xpress Music device, and only shows you content for that device. If you deep link into a particular product’s page that isn’t supported on the 5800 (or other S60 5th Ed phones), then the content appears as though it has been removed. Also, there’s not as much content available for s60 5th Ed phones, so there doesn’t look to be as much content overall in the store. Read More