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Now even SAP is talking about "situational"

Outside of mobility, but nevertheless. Quote from Shai Agassi's writeup on their upcoming Mendocino product:

All of the connections are governed by the context of the user ... and the situation they are solving. The result is an information bridge that allows for data to traverse upstream and downstream, as needed by the situation at hand, and the orientation of information change.

Impulse Information

MobileGirl writes about a concept she calls "Impulse Information":

Impulse information is something that you need within a few seconds of thinking of it. If it takes too much time, then your addiction and impulse wears off. You want to find that one thing. You want to find it fast. You want to find it now. You know what it is you are craving. The challenge is just to get it quickly.

You don't want to browse through a lot of pages. You don't want to sift through irrelevant content. You don't want to be bogged down by massive hierarchical structures...

Or, we might add: we don't want to be bogged down by complex ways of figuring out which application to run, how to sign onto a VPN, or any other obstacle between the situation and the information.

Another situational content project

Boston.com reports

One art project, Yellow Arrow, based in New York City, has developed a system where people can place yellow stickers in the shape of arrows around the city, stating that they have something to say about that particular location. Each arrow, which is ideally placed in a location that holds significance to the person, has its own unique code that can be sent to a mobile phone via text messaging, allowing others to read the message that was left.

I wonder how many people will actually type in codes. But the essence of the idea is clear: provide location-specific content that conveys a particular situation to the visitor.

Via ACM news service.

"Context Will Be the Secret Sauce of Wireless"

While this article is almost 2 years old already, it is as true today as it was then:

The anytime, anywhere concept of wireless data is not about jamming a Web page onto a mobile device; it's about context.

Couldn't agree more... the remainder is very worthwhile as well, and a good description of what situational software can do.

Mobile devices as situational remote control

This morning I met Tim Scannell, President and Principal of Shoreline Research, a consulting and research firm for wireless in the enterprise.

He believes that the mobile device will increasingly also be seen as a remote control device for the "enterprise devices around you". In healthcare, for example, the remote control aka handheld device might allow you to interact with various medical machinery, or bring up a patient record on a big screen in the room with the patient so you can jointly discuss it.

Situational software from a "control your environment" perspective.