Yahoo! onePlace: Mobile Content Collection
by John Biggs on March 4, 2008

1p_overview_3_1.jpg

Yahoo’s onePlace is a new service from Yahoo! which allows you to dump bookmarks into dedicated folders where you can view and arrange them on the fly. The example they give is a trip: you add your flight info, the weather, your hotel, and some things you’d like to see. You can also drop in video, audio, and pictures and view it all from your WinMo or BlackBerry phone.

You can group items as “Collections,” “Favorites,” and “Pulse.” Pulse is a system for streaming new information to your mobile i.e. flight time updates or news posts about a subject. It also has a mobile RSS reader built-in. Think of it as a del.icio.us that’s not del.icio.us and is mobile

It will launch in the Spring 2008 and will be bundled with Yahoo! Go 3.0 and Yahoo! oneSearch.

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  • a lot of “mobile” stuff today

  • Are You Listening? - March 4th, 2008 at 8:43 am PST

    It’s great to see Yahoo launching so much new stuff. Not.

    Yahoo is just launching a bunch of crap to get blogs to write about them. More and more stuff for the 415 and 650 types. Great, no one else cares.

    What happened to real innovation on the web? It seems like all the big players and small players are just trying to find ways to RSS this, or Twitter this, or combine this, or add this.

    Real innovation does one of the following:
    - Allows me to spend more time with my family and friends
    - Reduces stress
    - Makes me healthier
    - Makes me smarter
    - Makes me richer

    Most of these products accomplish none of the above.

  • It seems pretty interesting to see how Yahoo is doing.

    The company is not doing too well; turned down $42B, layoff 1000’s of employess… and still manage to keep on bringing new services (onePlace, yahoo live video, others), while scrapping old one.

    They need to get the company together, then they can add new stuff.

    Maybe all these new features are to increase the valuation of the company so they can sell it for more than MS offered. Let’s see!

    http://www.givemebeats.com/

  • Question:
    “….you can view and arrange them on the fly” — on the fly? As opposed to? You mean “easily”? Or “by drag & drop”?

  • Lots of services…not much Buzz!

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  • I thought they said that Yahoo! one search was going to change the mobile web….It didn’t…is this going to get any traction? how can it be monetized? ads? where are they?

    Google has said that mobile ads are a waste….

  • We have to agree with the post above stating how everyone is trying to RSS everything and overuse certain combining ideas. It is not that innovative although it does look good and may be useful for some. There seems to be too many RSS feed gadgets…an overflow of them.

  • ” *yawn* ”

    This is so true. I can’t think of a single use I would have for this. To me this is just a pretty form of uselessness

  • I’m always astonished when people suggest that Yahoo is releasing products in response to the Microsoft bid… as if Yahoo (or anyone) could churn out a reliable product in four weeks.

  • Some of the features like auto-updating sports scores and stock quotes will be interesting/useful. Between the additions of this and widgets in Yahoo! Go 3.0, it’ll be a useful all-in-one app for mobile devices.

  • My Yahoo! on phone?

  • I like the idea, but already do a lot of that myself manually. Blackberry service has be so unreliable lately that I make sure all flight info is copied directly to the device so that I don’t have to rely on an Internet connection.

    Will this service will provide that offline capability?

  • Does anyone else get the sense that Yahoo is streamlining their operations and making a strong push with a new medium in mobile?
    But the question is, how long until the “mobile web” ceases to exist?
    When devices improve, aren’t we all using the same Web – is a mobile version still necessary?

  • @2 — Nobody listens here. This is TechCrunch. Welcome to the Web 2.0 circle jerk.

  • I don’t think Americans understand yet why this service will be useful. I think it’s more targeted towards the European market where mobile phone networks are far superior and people use decent handsets. If I thought a Blackberry was the best there is out there then I probably wouldn’t see the benefit of this either.

  • While I am not impressed with Yahoo! in general, their recent moves on mobile are pretty darn smart. They are fighting Google Mobile on their own terms.

    Rather than going head to head with Google Mobile Search, which they would loose out to invariably, Yahoo! is taking the battle to a place where they have much more experience than Google – being a portal and a provider of quality services. There a bit more of an explaination here:

    http://www.accu...rvice-oneplace/

    I think this could change from being a battle to reign supreme on mobile search to being a battle to get maximum eyeballs on mobile.

  • There’s a service out there already which is similar – Bookmarks, RSS Feeds etc but No Downloads required…

    http://www.usemime.com

  • TY FOR THE NEWS
    פלג ריהוט משרדי במרכז

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