If you are reading this on Thursday and not already in the room at OMMA Mobile L.A., then go to Mediapost's Live
Raw blog to get updates about
what is going on.
Or use the Twitter hashtag #ommamobile to tap into the chatter in the room.
Since I am indisposed at the moment, I thought it fitting to turn
today's column over to my trusty assistant and occasional guest star. I turned my 17-year-old daughter loose in the app store last weekend just to see what happened. I agreed to let her take
my cast-off 3G to use as an iPod Touch on the condition that she reported on her activities so that my readers and I could get a micro-sample of teen priorities when it comes to cell phones. She
became my teen filter on the app store. Curiously, she never even thought to hunt for apps via iTunes, which was open on her laptop throughout. The on-phone store was the only resource she even
considered. Search-download-and-synch was not even an option to her.
After a day or so of app store play she walked me through her travels.
Much to my surprise, her
iPhone wallpaper was a dim and very old classic painting. "I love the Baroque period," she said.
I didn't see that one coming. A SpongeBob wallpaper, Robert Pattinson I would
get. But Michelangelo Caravaggio? "I love Caravaggio," she gushes, and I am starting to wonder if she is putting me on. But apparently the art history course she is taking is having an
effect. I was flush with pride. Dreams of an Art History professor in the family filled my head. I was doing the math on how to pay for four years at Yale and help her through the Ph.D.
"That one is of a bloated dead whore," she says matter-of-factly. Okay, now I really didn't see us approaching that curve. I am starting to dread where
this sojourn into teen tastes was headed and now I was wondering if I should lock this iPhone up -- along with her. According to my budding historian, in order to satisfy a Church commission to depict
the death of the Virgin Mary, Caravaggio stole the corpse of a drowned prostitute to use as a model and then bragged about it in his usual swaggering manner. "He was cool - a real
criminal." OK. The upside is, I really couldn't afford Yale anyway.
Perhaps the most important thing about the, um, "bloated whore," is that my daughter
procured the image by circumventing any paid wallpaper routes. She searched Caravaggio on Google Mobile and copied and pasted the image as wallpaper. This quickly became a theme: the resourceful use
of any and all nonpaid sources of content.
Not surprisingly, her first apps were social media: AIM and Facebook. But Facebook mobile was less impressive to her than to many of
us: "The layout is okay, but it took me a while to figure out there was a main menu and how to get to my notifications list." Perusing the status updates (the default for most of us) is less
important to her than the direct messages, since she and her friends are using Facebook as an online one-to-one messaging system. She likes AOL's AIM app because it offers the option of pushing
notices of new messages to her even if she is in other apps.
While the iPhone doesn't multitask, its new unified push messaging system makes it seem that way. Interestingly, her
correspondents on the other end complained that the AIM app did not let them know when she was typing a reply, which is the indicator to others that you are engaged in the conversation. "They say
they don't know if I am really here or not."
It was clear to me very quickly that instant messaging done well on a smart phone could be a very big deal for her and her crowd. Mobile
IM has been problematic because of technical limitations of feature phones, but as the IM experience on mobile approaches the desktop model, it offers distinct advantages. In just a day's time, my
daughter was using mobile AIM as much as any app. Actually, and this still amazes me, she spent hours on our couch with the laptop open to Facebook, her own cell phone working the SMS channel, and the
iPhone working AIM and the App Store.
Well, except for the time she spent with "SpongeBob Diner Dash." She clocked two hours playing the demo. While I was impressed by my
daughter's critical acumen throughout her evaluations of the various apps we covered, when I asked her why she singled out this game she shot me a quizzical look. "It's SpongeBob, Dad.
It's SpongeBob." With an audience like that, I think SpongeBob should just go IPO.
There is a class of apps that emits a high-pitched sound at a frequency only audible to people
under 20. I have seen these apps pitched to adult users as prankish teen-repellants. Watch your teenager flee from the room as you plead ignorance about that painful screech only they seem to be
hearing. According to my daughter, teens have turned the tables on us; her peers at school with iPod Touches and iPhones use these apps regularly in classes to annoy one another without the
teacher's knowledge.
That creative resourcefulness of teens is at once laudable and annoying. Teen researchers and teen-oriented content providers had told me before about the
importance of free services to this segment. It is precisely this search for free that leads so many teens into sites with predatory advertising and spyware. But watching my daughter so aggressively
root out the free alternative to everything was eye-opening. Fees, no matter how small, were simply walls to bounce off of in search of unpaid alternatives, while for me 99 cents for an app that looks
even vaguely interesting seems a small impediment to satisfying my curiosity.
"The AIM ads really bug me." Actually it is not just their presence that irritates her but the
placement. They pop up at the bottom of the app so when she is scrolling past messages or picking a correspondent at the bottom of the screen for a response, she accidentally taps the ad. I ask if she
would pay for the app rather than get ads. "I might -- but I won't."
I am sure there are teen marketers out there who are thoroughly familiar with this behavior, but I
was fascinated by how nuanced and deliberate my teen girl's hunt for free became as I sat there and watched her accept and reject apps. She distinguished between good and bad freemiums, for
instance. There were a number of apps designed to change the color of your charging battery icon, for instance. But most of the apps offered only a few solid color battery icons and made you pay for
the more decorative ones she really wanted.
She resented the game demos that truncated her play too soon. She seemed to have some kind of ethic of what was fair and not fair in the freemium
realm. If she deemed the bargain unfair, she just went on to find someone else who would give her something more for free. I guess it is possible for a freemium program to shoot itself in the foot if
it offers too little, but it is unclear whether the more generous demos are rewarded at all by attracting more users to try and then buy.
Thinking that it is time for the reality of the
adult media marketplace to assert itself (a capitalist teachable moment), I tell her, "You know dear, someone has to pay for that stuff somewhere along the line, either by showing you ads or by
getting your money. You can't insist on things having no cost for you and then gripe about advertising. You can't get everything for free."
She gives me a shocked,
woe-is-me,my-Dad-in-an-idiot look and says, "Sure I can!" She snaps her head back to the iPhone, juts her chin forward as if preparing to launch a dragster. "Just watch me!"