February 24, 2008

SYNCY That Phone

Roi Carthy

25 comments »

Companies are starting to figure out that the contact information on your mobile phone may be the most important social network you have - perhaps even better than the email inbox that Yahoo is targeting.

Danish startup ZYB started offering a service that simply backed up your mobile phone contacts to the web in mid-2006. A year later they turned all that data into a mobile social network. They’re one of the small startups with a real shot at mobile social network with critical mass. As of August 2007 they had 200,000 active users.

It’s no surprise, then, that ZYB is being emulated. Israeli startup NewACT, with $6.5 million in funding over two rounds from Cedar Fund, are launching a new service called SYNCY into beta today. The service lets users migrate contacts, calendars and media from a mobile phone to the web. It’s part ZYB, part Sharpcast.

While Syncy supports over 700 handset models, the iPhone isn’t one, so I took it out for a spin by installing it on a SonyEricsson phone. The feature that won me over was the ability to get immediate Web access to the photos and videos I’ve takes of our kids using the phone. Incidentally, the last time I had digital copies of such files was when I switched handsets. That’s when I had no choice but borrow a cable and install Nokia’s phone management application—by far, not a user-friendly proposition to access “everyday media”.

Syncy’s handset client is simple to operate and once syncing is configured to run automatically, it’s smooth sailing from there onwards. There’s also an Outlook plug-in which synchronizes contacts and events (Exchange is not required). Google calendar integration will be available shortly.

NewACT claims that Syncy is the only service to offer cross-phone synchronization. Meaning, you can sync a Nokia phone then stick the SIM in a Motorola phone and Syncy’s server will reformat and readapt the data to fit the exact data structures of your new phone.

500 TechCrunch readers will receive access to Syncy’s limited Beta by requesting an account and entering “TechCrunch.”

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  1. bob cobb

    I requested one. You put TechCrunch in the how did you hear about us field I assume?

  2. Michael Arrington

    yep

  3. bs

    i dont use anything that has BETA at the top

  4. Adam Hyman

    Wow, lots of interesting products coming out of Israel. Such a tiny country. I’d love to visit sometime.

    Japan also has lots of interesting products, but a much lower percentage is high tech. I think there will be more and more high tech coming out of Japan in the future.

  5. Samuel

    There’s also the great myFunambol portal, offering similar services (syncing contacts, calendar and pushing emails)
    http://my.funambol.com/

    Its’ based on the Funambol open source sync solution, meaning that you can install this app on your own server:
    http://www.funambol.com/

    You can check the number of interesting plugins which have been developed by the community:
    http://www.funambol.com/opensource/projects.php

  6. Andrew

    I pressed request an account, the button disappeared and then nothing happened

  7. Andrew

    also they don’t even own their .com name

  8. James Gillmore

    That’s actually a very good marketing tactic–pose as syncing software, and turn it into a userbase. All social networks should let you import contacts from mobile phones, not just the whole plaxo-style thing from gmail, hotmail, etc, address books.

    Someone should just make this software and resell at this poing–it’s doubtful that synchy, zyb, newact or whoever they are will want to do that, since they think they can go for it and make the super big bucks. However, it would be a highly monetizeable b-2-b service.

    James
    from
    FaceySpacey.com, Your One Stop Social Media Shop

    PS. Their logo looks like a radioactive sign:
    http://images.google.com/image.....amp;tab=wi

  9. RD

    Smart idea!

    My biggest drawback for buying different manuf phones is the hassle of cross transferring data between them.

    I put in a submission for an account. I’ll definately be using it.

  10. LouN

    I know Zyb does a good job of getting your “stuff” online, and I assume Syncy will be similar.

    The part Zyb is missing, and Syncy will also likely be missing is the “wireless” sync. The native app that sits on the mobile device and sync your “stuff” to the server without wires.

    Once people understand that there are wireless automatic sync options available, connecting your phone to your pc with a wire everyday turns quite tedious.

    I think Zyb understands this, which is why they send people looking for wireless sync with their service our way, and I would assume Syncy would do the same.

    Hopefully I get in the beta and try it out…

    Lou
    Nexthaus.com
    Nexthaus.com/iphone

  11. James Gillmore

    Wait, So u still need to use a cord for there stuff? wack.

  12. Haha, only if you cant work your phone

    Apparently Roi hasnt heard about the amazing and wonderful “irovians”…:)

    Anyway, Ive had no issues using nokia and samsung phone-supplied software with bluetooth sync for contacts for the last 6 years.

    Sometimes I have to use oulook express as a “middleman”, but I guess they call it “not for the faint of heart

  13. loren nason

    how long until we hear if we get an invite
    I signed up 40 minutes after you posted and still nothing.

    I’m hoping this can be used to ditch MS Exchange and I can use Google Apps that will completely sync with a windows mobile phone. and when I a new iPhone comes out w/ 3g it can sync to that.

  14. Phillip Marquez

    @ #7 James:

    Actually, I think you were thinking of the “Biohazard Symbol”
    http://images.google.com/image.....rch+Images

  15. Life Tester

    the syncy registration page doesn’t seem to support FireFox 2 (registration link is pressed, nothing happens)

    IE happily sees everything and allows you to register.

    btw: I bit archaic their registration page. there’s no direct referral field (where to save the TechCrunch pass :-), looks like all invitations are processed manually

    hmm…

  16. SYNCY

    #10 - 11
    The SYNCY service is all about wireless.
    No cables are required and all sync happens automatically over the GPRS / 3G network.
    SYNCY is also not only about contacts. It will sync your pictures, video and music files to the SYNCY website and let you easily move files between your PC/web and your phone.

    We are sorry for the delays but registration is manual at this stage…

  17. Ewan

    @LouN zyb.com seems to work just fine without ever plugging your phone into a PC? Have you tried it recently, maybe that’s an old limitation?

  18. Rafi Ton

    I wanted to make a few points on the service we offer:

    First and foremost, we are not trying to build a social network. The service is personal in nature and as such is designed to simplify mobile data management by providing a simple web access to your mobile data.

    Second, as RD noted above, we believe that the data you create on your phone belongs to you. Not to the mobile operator/carrier and not to device manufacturer. Hence one of the basic functions is to allow you, as a user, to move your data between different phones regardless of the phone type or network you are using.

    Third, the service does not require any cables or Bluetooth to mirror your data to the web site. Everything is done over the air. Simply, automatically and, most importantly, seamlessly. Once you configured your client, all you need to do is continue using the phone as you do every day.

    In the end of the day, we think that it is much easier to reply to SMS or compose MMS, manage your calendar, or update your mp3 play list from the web than from your mobile phone.

  19. LouN

    @Ewan - I meant that they focus on creating the web component of it, and not on the actual native sync app that sits on the phone. They refer customers to other companies, like us, who make those native apps that sit on the phones they do not support (Blackberry, iPhone, etc). My assumption was that Syncy would do something similar.

    Lou
    Nexthaus

  20. GP

    Styky, a TechCrunch 40 company, is also similar to Syncy and Zyb. However, they focus on wireless contact sync, and use those contacts to build a social network. Styky works as a native app on well over 100 devices, including Java, Windows Mobile, and Palm. They support sync alone on over 300 devices, without a mobile client application - this still allows you to manage your contacts online. They’ve also paired their service nicely with a Facebook app, Styky Phonebook.

  21. Seth

    Zyb does not require a special client. + all phones today have a sync to the PC, why should I want my info on the web? + the data cost of uploading and sync of picture is considerable - if it’s automatic that’s an issue.
    Posting photos and videos and sync are different needs - Shozu is doing the posting much better beacause you can post to myspace etc. If it’s only the calender + address book, there are tons of software around.

  22. Joe B

    Great service, 2 questions:

    - Do I buy it from the operator?
    - How much would it cost?
    - What about DRM protected files I downloaded?

  23. Omar Seyal

    “NewACT claims that Syncy is the only service to offer cross-phone synchronization. Meaning, you can sync a Nokia phone then stick the SIM in a Motorola phone and Syncy’s server will reformat and readapt the data to fit the exact data structures of your new phone.”

    That claim is false. US Cellular’s My Contacts Backup, AT&T’s Mobile Backup, Cellbackup.com, and several other services have been providing this features for a good while now (over 3 years in the case of Cellbackup.com).

  24. Stefan Fountain

    Another one to add to the list is our startup http://www.soocial.com. Our focus is on only syncing contacts, and doing that right. Currently in private beta, but releasing at SXSW in two weeks.

    Soocial syncs with OS X Address Book, most phones, Highrise and GMail.

  25. Wilson Wu

    Agree with Omar Seyal, NewAct is not the only service to offer cross-phone synchronization. In China, MyTT is the best mobile synchronization with cross-phone and more functions than NewAct which launch for 2 years. You can visit http://www.mytt.com/