Archive for the 'News' Category

Automatic SMS Web Backup for Android Phones Launched

The Treasuremytext Android App is now available on the Android Market (U.S. Only)

It took a little longer than expected but resulted in some significant changes to the app since we won the Developer Challenge based on a feedback from judges.

This is our first app which fulfills the request of many users which is for automatic backup of messages to Treasuremytext. We plan to roll this out to more smartphones in the future. This is where we see the future of Treasuremytext. Although SMS forwarding will always be an option, with more people taking up Smartphones we’re able to give people a much better experience through an app.

One thing we worked very hard on and are incredibly pleased with is the zero configuration authentication process we’ve implemented. It implements OAuth which is seen in our iPhone app but without need for passwords, logins and all that to’ing and fro’ing from site to app. This is still a pain on a mobile device and we think this is a much better way to do it. We’ll talk more about the actual implementation in a future post.

We’re trying to put together a quick video demo but in the meantime just go grab it and try it out, there are screenshots here.

We’re not sure how to link to the actual app in Market but just go to it on your Android phone and search for Treasuremytext in the Communication Apps section.

Treasuremytext wins in Android Developer Challenge

That's me bottom left in the Pink Shirt!

We won! Not the main prize that went to the fantastic Meter Maid app from Martin Koel en Alida Roskam (makes real easy the paying for parking around Amsterdam and other places I believe). Those two won a deserved return trip to San Francisco.

We though we’re thrilled to be win one of the other 4 prizes in a tough competition. Plus it’s fantastic to actually be able to get a G1 from T-Mobile as our prize. This will let us thoroughly test the Android app properly before releasing it on the Android Market.

It was a great event and lots of credit to Peter Robinett of Bubble Foundry for really starting the whole thing of with the excellent Mobile dev camps he’s been arranging here for the past few months in Amsterdam. We’ve been to a couple and there turning into some of the best meetups in town.

In the last few weeks we’ve become more and more excited about Android and starting to believe in it’s potential. We think it’s going to be a seriously big deal for Treasuremytext and a big part of our future. This is the first time we’ve been able to develop an app for a phone which we’ve dreamed about doing for a while now. It completes the Treasuremytext service, makes it seriously much easier to use and integrates seamlessly with your handset for the first time.

For all of those who’ve been asking about automatic backup to Treasuremytext with support for original dates and contact info, start looking at getting yourself an Android phone from T-Mobile as soon as you can.

We gave a small demo of the app which was recorded and will be placed up on T-Mobiles G1 site sometime today we’re told.

Hi Bewaarbox

Our Dutch speaking friend Alper tipped us of about Hi (a Netherlands MVNO) who are offering something very similar to Treasuremytext the Bewaarbox!.

We just checked them out and although similar in nature there are still plenty of things different about our services. One thing we do love is they let you print a tiny book of your messages. We’re looking to work with Moocards or someone similar to bring such a thing to Treausremytext because it’s really nice to be able to do that. The other big difference is they do MMS also but although we’re asked a lot about it we still prefer to concentrate on doing SMS and doing that as well as we can. MMS is such a different thing that it’s hard to make one thing that could do both really well.

Interestingly as an operator providing this, they don’t seem to be doing anything more magical than we are when it comes to the archiving process. When you want to save an SMS you send it to a number which is the model we’ve been using since we began which we think is the right one for most users. We tried to sign up, obviously to have a look around but couldn’t because it is tied to the Hi network (we’re with Vodafone). This makes sense because they can offer it as a nice service differentiator from the other networks. The downside is if you don’t happen to be with Hi you can’t use it. What happens if you ever switch networks is not obvious.

So if you’re not with Hi (or even if you are) Treasuremytext works just great in the Netherlands on any network and with a local Dutch 06 mobile number it’s probably going to be free with an inclusive SMS bundle for you to use!

If anyone is with Hi and has had a chance to play with it please share what it’s like and a couple of screen shots.

Treasuremytext iPhone app now available on Cydia

Treasuremytext for iPhone (Version 2.0) is now available to download via Cydia courtesy of iSpazio.

Features of the app:

  • Archive and Backup your SMS messages to your Treasuremytext account
  • Delete Individual SMS from your iPhone

Added benefits for use with Treasuremytext:

  • Messages appear in Treasuremytext with the original date sent
  • Messages appear in Treasuremytext in the right date order
  • Treasuremytext figures out the right ‘from’ contact info for you
  • A new contact is created if the from address is not yet in your Treasuremytext contacts

Keep an archive of your iPhone SMS on Treasuremytext.com

To install, use Cydia; you’ll find us under “T”! More info on the app, and installation instructions here.  The app works for iPhone 2G and 3G with 2.0 software and superseeds the original Treasuremytext for iPhone app. This app does require a jailbreak. For more info on why we can only make this app work for jailbroken iPhone read this post

This is a first sneak preview so if you do find any bugs please let us know over at Get Satisfaction.

Enjoy!

on Treasuremytext on Seesmic

 Treasuremytext - take 1

We met up with Rudy De Waele on Saturday ahead of his appearance at Mobile Monday Amsterdam (great presentation, by the way Rudy!) and he managed to convince Paul to do a quick demo of Treasuremytext via seesmic. Very impressed by seesmicing on the move (we were at de Balie); not so sure about the video replies!! :)

iPhone Dev Camp Amsterdam

I’m taking time whilst waiting for Mobile Monday Amsterdam to get into the swing of things to post my pictures and thoughts from iPhone Dev Camp Amsterdam on Saturday. It’s been a busy few days of mobile application development in Amsterdam and I’m noticing two worlds about to collide.

Whilst we have long been advocates of mobile+web or web+mobile / integrated services (take Treasuremytext as an example), it seems now iPhone is here, more web people are starting to take mobile really seriously.

iPhone Dev Camp was a fabulous indicator of the appeal of the iPhone platform; with a sell out 120 signups on Upcoming; and a packed Mediamatic all day Saturday. So are there 120 iPhone Developers in Amsterdam? Well, no actually nearly all of these guys would like to be iPhone developers but come from the web world. They’re making great 2.0 apps with PHP, Python, Ruby, but Objective C and Cocoa; skills you’ll need to get going with iPhone seem a long way off. iPhone Dev Camp to the rescue! Peter Robinnet made everyone at home with pancakes and the fun began. The Dutch developer scene is pretty friendly, people are happy to help each other out as they start with small scale apps to learn the basics.

We’re lucky to know at least 3 Cocoa Developers (who’s earning potential at least doubled as they can now easily transition and sell their services as ‘iPhone Developers’). For people who have any Mac development skills this is a huge opportunity. iPhone Dev Camp also highlighted that there are people desperate to have their ideas realised in the App store. The web guys get it too; and know the potential of web+iPhone strategies.

Some of the guys at the event managed to learn enough to create their first ‘hello world’ level iPhone apps - and many did much better with some pretty neat ideas. We managed to get the Treasuremytext for iPhone app tested and very nearly ready!

My pictures are here, and the Treasuremytext for iPhone app will be available very soon.

“because it feels good when you stroke me”

A lovely surprise today! We’re getting a free BOA iPhone faux leather case… just for being iPhone developer types! Hmm, looks like all their stuff is gorgeous. Thanks BOA!

Official™ iPhone App - We’re working on it.

With our announcement of our official iPhone developer status (grandiose terms for “we can distribute on the App Store”), the launch of the App store and the 3G iPhone, some users of our unofficial™ Treasuremytext for iPhone app have wondering what’s taking us so long. “fbindc” recently commented:

“Hi! What’s the status of the treasure my text app? I’m dying to download this from the app store. Many iphone users are losing all there data, including text messages, with various 2.0.1 update bugs. Very frustrating, and your service would be really handy right now.” 

With that, we thought it was time to for an update to our iPhone users (including ourselves).

What’s happening with Treasuremytext for iPhone 2.0?

Treasuremytext for iPhone development is underway; and with an official SDK and some documentation this time round this ones a big upgrade over the original. Things we’re looking to do with the new app: archiving entire conversations (a big request), a much improved interface for sorting through your SMS via your Contacts, some location awareness which attaches that metadata to your messages.  We’ll also be experimenting with the accelorometer to measure how fast you’re travelling at the time you archive and then work out if you were out walking, in a car, train, aeroplane etc and add that meta data to your archived message. Forget that last thing; stupid idea, but you get the idea - the iPhone is an incredible platform, we love it and we plan to be there as soon as possible.

(If you’re sat in a train, can your iPhone tell how fast you’re traveling? I didn’t pay attention in Physics classes; my guess is it can’t. For one, it would play havoc with super monkey ball but the accelerometer, I think only detects changes to motion; not motion itself?? I digress…)

Making the new app is going to take a little bit of work and we’re fitting it in around everything else we’re doing here. Apart from this, as of writing, there is still missing support in the SDK which means we can’t complete our app’s development. In a perfectly sensible move by Apple, all 3rd party applications are sandboxed so they live and make as much mess as they like in their own space on your phone. If they screw up they only screw themselves up. This protects the iPhone and you from rogue apps trampling all over your iPhone’s file system turning it into something resembling a Windows Mobile device or doing things it shouldn’t be - making phone calls to premium rate sex lines that kind of thing.

iPhone 101 and how our apps get your stuff

To control how an app goes about it’s business and to give it deeper integration with the data on the phone there are APIs provided by Apple that give our apps access to its data. Right now there is one for the iPhone’s Address book and Photos but as far as stuff on your phone goes that’s it. There’s nothing yet to access any of the other data stored on your iPhone such as Call logs, Email, Calendars, Music, Videos or SMS. We don’t have any privileged information so we don’t know when / if these features will be added but we remain hopeful and optimistic that they will and allowing us to release this through the App store.

An iPhone at the heart of your social graph

Providing access to this personal data seems to be a natural evolution of the SDK and will make possible a new kind of App and we think spur a new wave of development for the iPhone. This personal data is really what your phone is all about and our optimism is based on the fact we’re pretty sure we’re not the only developers who can think of things to do with this data and who are crying out for it.

Your (i)Phone knows a lot about you, who you call, who last called you, who you’re meeting with at lunch, who you SMS, where you are, where other people are, who you are. Beyond just some cool utility apps you could build for managing & handling this data, syncing it online (boring) there is something insanely more interesting that would happen when you get this data out of the confines of the phone handset and hook it into online spaces, specifically adding a new dimension to your web based social activities. The phone despite being your single most important means of communicating/socialising in the real world still doesn’t get that involved in your socializing activities in the online one. It’s a no brainer that in the future this is going to change and the iPhone and phones in general will start to meld and integrate more with your web based activities blurring what happens in the real world with what happens in the online one. Developers such as Loopt and Facebook I’m sure are salivating at the idea of being able to leverage the social graph information stored within your phone to combine it with their own.

Sounds like some scary shit

To some folks (we’ve been listening to too much Obama to start saying ‘folks’) this will sound scary, and rightly so, what apps are you going to allow to get at this stuff? Of course with the Treasuremytext app its motives are clear and we’re an incredibly trustworthy bunch! But should all apps be granted access wily nily to what you have on your phone?  There are issues regards privacy and maybe it is a mitigating factor in why we haven’t seen such access in the SDK yet. Should all Apps automatically get access to all your personal data or should extra permissions need to be granted by the user to the app? That sounds un-Apple, creating different classes of application that during install the user must give explicit permission to gain special priveliges, that’s just yuck. Then again maybe none of this is nescessary, Apple vet our apps anyway, have the power to pull them of the shelf and even it seems potentially remotely disable them so maybe there’s enough safe guards inherent in the system as is.

Our get out out of Jail free card

This is all well and good but for now this doesn’t help people archive their SMS with Treasuremytext. To get things moving along we’re going to take some time out of the new apps development to tweak our current iPhone app so it will work on Jailbroken iPhone 2.0 phones both 2 and 3G. This shouldn’t take too long and we hope to have it available soon.

We’ll be continuing work on the new version and get it ready to go as soon as the SDK allows. There is always the option of releasing it as a jailbroken version but for now we will wait to see what unfolds with the official SDK.

Treasuremytext Limited

Treasuremytext has now been incorporated as a new Limited Company. Previously Treasuremytext was a project of Kisky Netmedia, but due to our imminent expansion we’ve split it out in to its own company; with a new board of advisors, new staff and a host of new features coming soon. Oh, and check out our company number! Surely starting with ‘666′ is a good thing!

We have iPhone developer status!

4000_developers.png

We now have iPhone Developer Status! 25,000 applied to the programme and 4000 have been accepted to date. This is great as it means we can get our next gen Treasuremytext iPhone app ready sooner. (And also make other great things for iPhone).