The one I’ve started with is a service called Winksite. On the home page of their website the company claims that, “Winksite makes it easy to publish mobile websites and communities that can be viewed worldwide on any phone.” So I thought I would try to set up my own site as an extension of this blog.
What’s good about it
I was actually quite impressed at just how easy it is and at the number of features on offer. Once you have registered, Winksite offers users the opportunity to set up as many as 5 websites for mobile devices. Each site can have a range of features that you can select and edit from a fairly easy to use web based interface. Some of the possible features for your mobile website include:
- Announcements
- Blog entries
- Journal entries
- Field reports
- Profile information
- User surveys
- Chat rooms
- Forums
- Feed syndication
- Plus a few others
- set up my mobile site
- added my profile
- personalised the look of the site
- created a couple of surveys
- added chat and a forum
- posted a blog entry and an announcement.
The sites that Winksite creates comply to all the established standards for mobile site, so that’s great too and also means that the site can be accessed through other mobile devices. I use an Opera browser on my Nintendo DS Lite as a kind of wireless palmtop as I roam around the house and garden, so to be able to access the site on that for me is really a great bonus.
- Here’s a movie showing what my site should look like on a mobile phone.
Winksite demo - Here’s another movie showing how to create your own site
Tutorial movie 1 - An this movie shows how you edit and change the site
Tutorial movie 2 - You can try the live site on your PC
Interact with the live Winksite
What’s not so good about it
From the Winksite homepage you can also have a look around at the other sites that are being created. This isn’t so impressive, as it seems that lots of people are interested in finding out how this works etc, but it’s hard to find any sites that have more than one or two members signed up, and not many have much content added. That isn’t a criticism of the tool though, I think it’s just that the audience / market for mobile web content is still quite new and there is obviously huge potential here. The makers have also tried to steer you towards the best content by adding an Editor's choice section, as well as having a regular Featured site.
Unless you have a good contract with your phone provider that gives you plenty of web access included, accessing the site could be expensive. Having said this the pages the site produce are all pretty lite and should load pretty quickly, so comparatively, this won't be such an expensive site to access.
How to use it with my students
This is a difficult one. If you have students who come to class regularly, are they really going to want to use a mobile phone based web community to interact with their teacher and the other students from the class? I think probably not. There is also the problem that some students may well not have phones that are capable of browsing websites.
- If however you have distance or online classes then I could see the possible potential of using a tool like this in conjunction with other web based materials to support students and make it easier for students to work together and keep in touch with you.
- The site could be useful for a class project. Get the students to decide on issues that they feel are important to them, then set up the site based around one of these issues and try to get students from other classes or schools exchanging opinions and polling each other.
- You could set up polls and surveys on Winksite as a form of action research to get anonymous feedback from students and create dialogue with them about some of the methods you’re using in class.
- You could get students to create their own site as a form of learner diary.
- You could set up a site to keep in contact with the parents of your students and help to keep them informed about what’s going on with their children and any events etc that are happening at the school. You could even post your homework assignments on the site so that the parents check to see that their children are doing the work you set them.
- You could try to get students to collaboratively write a book/ story from their phone or computer. Decide on the topic first and then ask students to take it in turns to add a page each. Others could interact and vote on what they would like to happen next using the survey feature.
If you want a multi-featured mobile phone website with lots of interactive features, and you don’t want to pay anything for it, this is a great place to start. The feature set is rich and varied and the interface seems to be pretty easy to use. It’s difficult to say though at the moment if having a website that is accessed though a mobile phone has any really significant advantages over one that is purely accessed through a computer. I suppose a lot depends on how much change there is in coming months / years regarding access the web through mobile phones. The popularity of Apple’s new I-phone certainly points towards, this happening, but looking at the costs involved at present, it’s still going to be a while before this kind of access is available to many in poorer countries.
If you try out this tool or have tried similar one please leave a comment.
Best
Nik
3 comments:
Thank you Nik for the time you put in to take a look at Winksite and explain some of it's features and benefits to your readers. Greatly appreciated.
Re: If having a website that is accessed through a phone has any really significant advantages over one that is purely accessed through a computer. iPhone etc.
I'll quote Brian Fling (http://www.future-of-mobile.com/speakers.html) who did a good job commenting on this very topic of "One Web" on a recent Mobile Monday London thread...
Brian wrote:
"While a worthy technological ideal, I believe the classic One Web argument provides little benefit to how real people use mobile content today. And I believe this will be the case for many years to come.
The problem isn't the capabilities of the device, or standards, or even operators, as much as we'd like to blame them for being the root of all evil. The problem is context.
Content viewed on a mobile device has an entirely different context than that of the desktop web, a physical context often dealing with their mobility. Mobile content can and should be relevant to the users physical location, to their task at hand. It should address the fact they are viewing the content on a smaller device, over constrained bandwidth, or maybe while driving a car (no one ever does that right?). Or even do something simple like initiating a phone call (I know! how old school!).
The desktop web has no meaningful reason to do this today, so context is largely ignored from the creation of web standards to the creation of web content. Therefore I believe as long as the user has multiple contexts in which they can apply personal relevance to content, there will always be a strong need to serve multiple versions of content, the cursed concept of "multiple Webs."
I apologize for the soapbox, but no... I believe as mobile devices become more advanced, the need for "multiple Webs" will increase, not decrease. As devices become smarter at detecting physical context it is entirely possible that there will be a version of content for every context. Besides, if there can be more than one Universe, why can't there be more than one Web?"
...and in the case of M-Learning that statement seems to resonate all the more so.
Cheers,
David Harper
Founder, Winksite
Hi Nik, I'm slowly losing touch with reality, apparently, I can't rememgber whether I know you from Language Lab or just from other stuff you do for SL? Thank you, in any case, for an super overview of the mobile technology for beginners - great site.
I agree in general with David and I would like to add what I have discovered about mobility and teenagers. My students are "in the instant" and totally attached to immediate connections - as in CHAT! I used to send emails to make or change class meeting appointments or accept changes requested by students until I realized that they just turn on the chat engine and look for the message there - even though no meeting is scheduled and often, they don't even read their mail. This is what has decided me to go mobile on line. It seems that the key to keeping their attention is to be ubiquitous and mobile as well as interactive.
So I'm on a quest. Have you found any hosts that offer images and video for free or for a reasonable price (under 20E)?
Thanks,
Linda
Hi Linda
Have you tried Radar? You can find it at http://www.radar.net/. It might be what you are after.
Best
Nik
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