Archive for the 'Germany' Category

Comprehensive List of German Mobile Startups

Did you ever wonder what is going on in the mobile startup scene in Germany?

I crawled through the German web and - besides noticing and wondering how many new mom&dad, sport and pet communities we have - collected a decent list of mobile startups.

If you know a company that is missing please add it in the comments. I will keep an eye on any new startups and follow up on this in the future.

Mobile Content
dailyme.tv Application to automatically grab videos to your phone. Nokia only so far.
hiogi Text any question when you are on the go to a short code number and the community will reply with an answer.
itsmy Mobile content community. Site looks like Jamba TV ads.
ViiF Stream yourself with video telephony function of your phone and view videos. See the detailed report.
yasssu Reformat content to mobile. For media companies.
Mobile Gaming
ewave Provider of mobile multiplayer games.
Mobile Services
Beem it up Scotty Send any file over the web to your mobile device.
cellity Application for your phone to make cheap phone calls
indyphone Create wallpapers for your mobile phone.
Mobile Social Networks
aka-aki Creative and promising startup. Uses Bluetooth technology to connect with people around you.
KWICK! German social network with new large mobile website.
Plazes Create activities to let your friends know what you are doing where. See recent coverage.
peperonity Mobile community. Did they do this retro-design on purpose?
plexme Connect with people in your region. SMS-based.
qeep Nice design. Cheap messages to other devices.
Qiro Promising application for your phone. Similar to loopt.
Rock-It-Mobile Create your own groups and chat with SMS.
scaanoo Mobile messenger community. Do they think the design of the logo brings success?
TownKings Explore your city.
Townster See above.
Youni-mobile Community and virtual network operator.
Microblogging
1you Seems like Twitter for dating. Did the designers actually look at the rendered page?
baluu Basis microblogging. Only a few posts a day on the system.
brabblr Broadcasts messages to various microblogging platforms (Twitter, Jaiku, tumblr, …)
dasbeep Another Twitter-clone
dukudu Good looking clone. Not much going on anymore.
Frazr Most active German microblogging service.
niimo Former texteln.de. Quite active.
Slogr *Yawn*
Wamadu Number for each mobile operator so most folks can use their included messages.
Was geht bei dir? *Yawn* again…
Mobile Tagging
BeeTag Mobile Tagging system (Switzerland)
KAYWA Provides mobile blogs and QR reader + other services. (Switzerland)
kooaba Make a picture of the real-world object and easily get further information. (Switzerland)
TagYourCity Post stickers with encoded information in your city. (Austria)

Facebook Reaches Germany With Localized Version

Localized version of Facebook

German Facebook clone StudiVZ is now getting serious competition in Germany, Austria and Switzerland. Facebook just launched a localized German version of their social network. Today all Germans have to learn English in school, but most - even college students - prefer to do everything in their primary language.

Many successful international startups do not have the resources to localize right away and focus on the U.S. market first, which gave the various German Web 2.0 clones like StudiVZ a chance to grow. StudiVZ launched in fall 2005 and claims that they are having about 4.9 Million users today. Facebook, with about 700,000 members in Germany, only has a fraction of the users but the user base is expected to raise significantly now that the app is localized.

The German translation is still far from perfect but students and others will begin to see that the Facebook platform is way superior to the poorly copied StudiVZ. StudiVZ basically looks the same as Facebook did several years ago (besides the colors) and doesn’t provide applications, an activity stream or a mobile version.

Although StudiVZ has better connections to German media partners I do not think they can compete against the well-funded giant Facebook. In the end Facebook’s rumored cooperation with Nokia, where all Nokia devices might come with a pre-installed Facebook client, and similar deals will break StudiVZ’s neck. Only the people that have spent hours on StudiVZ collecting friends will have doubts to switch and stay loyal first. However, when more and more of their friends have left StudiVZ they will also embrace the change and join Facebook.

It will be exciting to watch the social networking war and Facebook’s launch will hopefully help to boost the German Web 2.0. You can count that I will keep an eye on this and in particular the usage of the already localized mobile version of Facebook here in Germany.

Kudos to zweinull.cc for pointing the German release out.

Mobile Startups to Watch - ViiF

ViiF Logo

An easy and intuitive way to access a mobile service is one of the most important pieces to become successful in the mobile space. ViiF - Germany’s first mobile video community - has found such a way. No software has to be installed on the mobile phone. No specific browser is required.

Videos are uploaded and downloaded with the video call functionality of the phone. This makes it incredibly easy to access the service even for folks that are not so technically savvy. The only prerequisites are that your mobile network operator (MNO) runs a video-call-enabled 3G network and that your phone supports those video calls. All German operators provide access to ViiF with rates between 0,39€ and 0,58€ per minute for recording and watching content. O2 currently provides free access, which makes the service especially interesting for O2 users.

ViiF Video Call

After calling ViiF’s short code number from your mobile phone you are in a video call and can choose between recording a new and watching existing videos. Recorded videos can be saved in different folders to share publicly or only with friends.

Friends can be notified by SMS that a video has been recorded. Furthermore, it is possible to add ViiF to your blog with the ViiF Player and vblog your recordings to the blogosphere.

Besides streaming to and watching videos from your friends ViiF provides even more entertainment. They have contracts with MTV, ProSiebenSat.1-Group (large German TV stations) to push news, music, movie trailers and other additional content on your mobile.

Although ViiF is only available in Germany so far it is one of the first German websites that has a Facebook application. Facebook has not entered the German marked with a localized version yet but this is expected to happen in the next couple of weeks. Until today the Facebook-clone StudiVZ is the most active social network for college students in Germany. Facebook’s platform is way superior to the poorly copied StudiVZ website and I am expecting that most German students will turn their back to StudiVZ as soon as the language barrier drops. This makes ViiF’s Facebook Application a great move for the future.

ViiF is based in Berlin and has raised an undisclosed amount of venture capital from Neuhaus Partners, VC Fonds Berlin and various business angels. They have even been nominated for (but didn’t win) the Mobile Monday Peer Award 2008.

ViiF is a great service but to make this a true success ViiF has to master the difficult task to get the mobile network operators to lower their prices or to provide the service for free as it happened with O2. If this is not possible another way has to be found on the long run to access ViiF. Unlimited mobile data plans are becoming cheaper in Germany and nobody will pay those prices per minute if other vblogging services can be accessed over the Mobile Web free of additional charge.

Mobile Startups to Watch - Plazes

Plazes

Plazes is an the first (?) international location-aware social network and has already been around since 2004. I didn’t come along the term for a long time but back in those days this has been called MoSoSo (= Mobile Social Software). You can discover “Plazes” anywhere in the world, share your location, hook up with your mates or other people in your vicinity and all the usual social networking features such as groups, messaging and commenting are included as well.

The venture has been founded in 2005 by Felix Petersen and Stefan Kellner in Berlin, Germany. By 2006 Plazes had secured seed financing from business angels such as Esther Dyson, Marc Andreessen and Martin Varsavsky. In 2007 Plazes raised €2.7 Million from Doughty Hanson Technology Ventures in another round of funding.

Plazes originally started to map a user’s location based on the MAC address of the wireless network that was being used. New routers were discovered by users and tagged with geo-coordinates. After having downloaded a “Plazer” your notebook was capable of detecting your current location by investigating the network you were using.

Nowadays there are plenty of different locations, which are not tied to wireless networks anymore, in the system. The tracking no longer relies on wireless networks. A user can submit his location by SMS, the website or an updated version of the “Plazer”. The new activity concept adds a Twittery Twist to Plazes so that I can describe what I am doing when broadcasting my whereabouts to the world. The latest version is also preserving a user’s update history and allows planning meetings in the future. Recently a new API has been released to enable developers to build their own applications and to extend the reach of the Plazes network.

Even though Plazes is based in Germany its majority of users is from the United States. Many similar location-aware services like Loopt, Helio or Dodgeball (still alive?) exist and similarities between Plazes and websites like Twitter and Jaiku are evident.

To gain more users the challenge for Plazes will be to distinguish itself from comparable services. Opening the system with a new API is definitely a step in the right direction. It will be interesting to watch the fight between the mobile social networks and how Plazes evolves in the future. I will keep an eye on them and inform you about any interesting updates.

Are you using Plazes? What do you think should Plazes do?

German Mobile Startups to Watch

Do interesting German mobile startups exist or is this area occupied by the often-quoted German Copy/Paste Innovation that has been dominating the German Web 2.0?

Magnifying Glass

Damn sure there are! During my research I was not bombarded with dozens of mobile startups, but I found a hand full of interesting and innovative companies I want to further elaborate on in future posts. Partly those companies are even targeting an international market and are not only focused on Germany. Stay tuned for the next posts!