Squace blog

Squace is a Universal Mobile Interface

Get Started

Squace on Facebook

Squace on Twitter

Categories

Archives

Tags

2010 Add new tag AlwaysOn android Apple blackberry blog design ETRE 08 förskolan i mobilen fun stuff Geek Girl Meetup GigaOM InvestICT Iphone itunes jobs King Mobile mobile bookmark mobile browser mobile content Mobile Internet mobile marketing Mobilize MOBILIZE 08 neoteo Ovum Ovum report Ovum white paper Point of view Rebtel Red Herring red herring 100 europe award redherring finalist europe skolan i mobilen Squace Squace design Squace related Strategy UMI Universal Mobile Interface White Paper wordpress wordpress plugin

Translator

English flagItalian flagKorean flagChinese (Simplified) flagChinese (Traditional) flagPortuguese flagGerman flagFrench flagSpanish flagJapanese flagArabic flagRussian flag
Greek flagDutch flagBulgarian flagCzech flagCroat flagDanish flagFinnish flagHindi flagPolish flagRumanian flagSwedish flagNorwegian flag
Catalan flagFilipino flagHebrew flagIndonesian flagLatvian flagLithuanian flagSerbian flagSlovak flagSlovenian flagUkrainian flagVietnamese flagAlbanian flag
Estonian flagGalician flagMaltese flagThai flagTurkish flagHungarian flag      
By N2H

Search

Squace is Top Story at The Next Web

21 September, 2010 (23:01) | News, Squace related

Squace is a social mobile browser that lets you use and share mobile services, content, and information across platforms. The service goes further than that, however.

The really neat thing about Squace is that all of one’s bookmarks, contacts, RSS-feeds, and more are presented in tile form.  The reasoning?  To present more information in a smaller space.”

Read full article

Squace at French Retail Summit – Kista Science Tower

24 May, 2010 (14:46) | Squace related

Squace at French Retail Summit from www.squace.com on Vimeo.

Presentation at French Retail Summit – Kista Science Tower, Stockholm, Sweden 2010-05-05.
By Frank Verschoor, CEO at Squace and Aage Reerslev, Founder of Squace.

We are on track!

15 April, 2010 (08:28) | Mobile Internet


Although all of us at Squace have been quiet for a while, rest assured we have been very busy in the background and so we are delighted to announce that, despite difficult market conditions, we have secured sufficient funding to take Squace to the next level of development.

In December 2009 Morgan Stanley released an extensive Mobile Internet Report in which they forecast that Internet on the mobile will become mainstream in the second half of 2010. In August 2009 the Aberdeen Group also released a report on the growth of Mobile Marketing and Advertising in which they made clear that for this sector to fulfill it’s expected exponential revenue growth, that the ability to target audiences on behavioral data rather than on types of mobile devices would be critical. By applying the Universal Mobile Interface principles to our strategy as of day one, Squace is well positioned to ride the wave of a dynamic emerging market.

We have benefited from constructive feedback as a result of more than 600.000 downloads of preliminary versions of our product and subsequently have gained extensive and valuable input from the users about what they truly value in Squace and what they would like to see extra for the future.

Our mantra is that it is fundamental that the user is in command. It will always be a user’s decision as to which bookmarks are on deck for instant mobile access. Although the vast majority of feature phone users are very satisfied with a personalized universal solution, those consumers who opt to use smart phones devices, such as iPhone, Android and Blackberry, want to have a solution that matches the ‘feel’ of their ‘expensive’ device. Most early users also informed us that they appreciate the embedded sharing capabilities of Squace. Many of them even would love to see us adding more functionality to the contact book in such a way that it would become a single starting point for multiple ways of communication, such as call, email, social messaging, twitter, etcetera.

This week we have launched an update for our current users in which we have fixed quite a few bugs and added new functionalities, which will ease the process of adding bookmarks into Squace whilst just browsing from a regular PC. Also this week we launched our testing process on Blackberry and Android touch screen devices. An iPhone version will follow very shortly.

In the forthcoming period we aim to release a lot of new features on Squace related to optimizing the user experience. People who are interested in the details can participate in Squace Labs.

Dedicated test communities are helping us to get the best product out. Click here, if you want to be involved.

You are more than welcome!

Do you want to work on Squace?

11 December, 2009 (15:46) | Uncategorized

Are you a highly skilled & passioned software developer?
At Squace we develop a personal mobile app, which will provide all kinds of human on the planet with online oxygen wherever they go. Our software application provides each individual user with a small screen optimized navigation path (Patent pending) to have simple click access to personally relevant information sources and applications on their mobile and the internet. The Squace application will be made available on all types of mobile devices, which are Internet enabled. If you’re an excellent software developer who is into cool stuff and want to spend your energy with a passioned team on a clear mission – we can provide the challenges you are looking for!

Technology-wise Squace is a server-based solution with extremely thin native clients for Iphone, Android, Java, etcetera. Other developer keycharacteristic are amongst else great user experience, scrum, database optimization, effective search, tag frameworks, efficient load balancing, and high volume traffic.

Read more about the company and the strategy at www.squace.com or www.universalmobileinterface.wordpress.com.

We are looking for software engineers, software architects, user experience designers in the following areas of expertise:
• Client application development (small screen mobile devices, Java, Android, Iphone)
• Core architecture development (Java Hibernate, Postgres)
• Web application development (Java, Javascript, Flash)

We are happy to inform you more, if you have any interest.

Please let us know, send us a mail and introduce yourself and we’ll get in touch with you!

jobs@squace.com
Career inquiries

Why Squace, part 1

24 October, 2009 (09:11) | Mobile Internet

Universal Mobile Interface – Umi Presentation

5 May, 2009 (13:49) | 2.0, Mobile Internet

Squace y Zumobi: Internet en tu móvil

13 August, 2008 (17:37) | News

<br /> <span class=

Por: Tomás García @  lunes, 11 de agosto de 2008  Nota vista 585 veces

Exceptuando el iPhone, que incluye un explorador web integrado, navegar por internet en un móvil siempre fue una experiencia traumática. Pero ahora, con dos aplicaciones que tienen otra manera de pensar, podemos navegar por nuestro contenido favorito de manera fácil y a una velocidad mucho más rápida.

Read more here!

Breaking loose

17 April, 2008 (23:20) | Mobile Internet, Point of view

I’m so impressed with people that both have the time and skills to develop a business as well as expressing themselves on a blog. Sadly enough I can only do one thing at the time. That’s probably the reason why Squace kept a pretty low profile. We have in fact worked like hell on the job at hand—the mission:

A more user-friendly mobile Internet. Or, more crassly put: I wanted to get the bloody stuff into MY cell phone (Stuff is our label for things like bookmarks, services, music and widgets). I gave myself a promise the day we started Squace: I’ll stop using my old calendar as soon that I can get it Squaced. And I wanted to share stuff or messages with whoever I pleased—independent of operator, handset, or geography.

Huge tasks and not without difficulties. Here’s a rundown of what slowed me down:

Operators: They’re controlling my choice of content and services and charging me heavily (OK, I’ve got a fixed data-transmission plan in Sweden but when I’m in London, they charge me 15 pounds a meg – a rip-off beyond imagination). Perhaps am I the exception, though to the fact that I can’t find much use of there content, or, I’m afraid I’m right here, there are in fact not much of real interest. The things that do matter to me; my kids schedule, our company intranet and my favorite services is harder than impossible to get into a ordinary phone. Partly due to the URL-tapping (which I hate) and partly that they don’t “fit in”.

Aage says: Don’t mess with my stuff.

So operators, give this a second, third, or fourth thought: if you don’t implement fixed data-transmission plans and humane roaming prices (fixed plans are also much cheaper to administer) then the WiFi guys will take over “the always-connected future market”, and it isn’t that far away.

That said, I still like you and your network coverage. And as a user, I’m willing to pay for Internet access, but you need to think Internet!

Why not create more access points to get more users with which you can share infrastructure investments. More things could use an access if the price is right. Hey, my car could use that, and my computer, my heat system, washing machine, hell even my toaster! Most of these things will not consume a lot of bandwith, not my mobile phone and especially not my toaster.

Get all the toasters, TV-sets, computers, cars onboard and you can afford to roll out turbo 3G, and perhaps even some LTE. That without going head to head with the media- and ad market, a battle you’ll never win.

Aage says: Make mobile Internet access cheaper to create healthier business.

Handset manufacturers: Hello guys (mostly guys tinker with this technology). You design a lot of fantastic mobile devices. Naturally, each device targets a particular user group (read: irony).

You heavily load most devices with amazing functions and features. That’s perfectly OK in the free world. But, why do most people still just use the device for phoning and SMS?

I think it would be much cooler if my pictures, music, bookmarks – stuff – could be shared with others (or uploaded to web sites). Hell yes: it’s doable you say—but the price for MMS is too high and beyond your control. And, you continue, Internet is more standardized and open but not secure enough. And then there is the different screen sizes, operating systems and jada, jada.

On top of all that, the URLs are too complicated to tap into (not to mention other things such as credit card information). So, you start smiling, the answer will be WAP 2.0 and IMS solutions.

Note: When we started Squace a year ago, we almost took the decision to develop Squace in mobile Ajax. Sadly enough, we must wait some more years due to performance AND distribution. Right now, Java is the only technology that provides both.

Just a sanity check here, perhaps directed more at the infrastructure guys rather than the device guys (they probably don’t care and will more easily shift toward WiFi, or even WiMax, if and when the market demands that).

So infrastructure guys: Why do you pour millions of dollars into developing the IP Multimedia Subsystem (IMS) when everything already exists on today’s Internet?

There is plurality of solutions on every aspect of IMS. A multitude of companies have been delivering these solutions for many years with daily use by millions of users. Is it possible that you missed companies as Google, Pay pal, Skype and MSN? As most internet services are pretty secure and trustworthy, don’t you think.

Drop that and invest in creating great access technology with less bottle-necks and higher performance. Then the Internet services will flow over to the mobile world. Big time!

Back to the business. I’m happy to be a part of this truly emerging market of mobile Internet. And see the birth and growth of thousands of start-ups—most with Internet background and competing more or less on equal terms with big companies—often with some partnership or at least using the open common standards of Internet and sharing APIs with one another.

In the end, as most successful Internet companies know: Develop the service YOU need or are missing, if you love it enough you’ll probably find others who love it too.

Don’t be evil. Be Square!

My favorite mobile site right now is frizon where you can download young artists music. Just click the link and you’ll have it in your mobile.