Categories
Close
Menu
Menu
Close
Search
Search

Featured Articles

Opinion

We interview ipadio CEO Dr Mark K Smith about the company's growth

Mark

Share:

Print

Rate article:

No rating
Rate this article:
No rating

Mark Bridge writes:

Two years ago we talked to Mark Smith about a new company he’d just launched. It was called ipadio and it offered a straightforward proposition: you made a phone call and ipadio would turn it into a live online broadcast with a permanent online recording - either as a free service for consumers or as a premium service for businesses.

This week I caught up with Mark again and started our conversation by asking him what had changed.

“There have been three significant developments since we spoke”, Mark said. “The principle of live streaming a telephone call is our bedrock, that’s what we do. But we’ve also introduced a service called Voice Forms, which is a form of IVR. We’re testing a podcasting studio service to allow people to rather more elegantly create podcasts - and thirdly has been some work we’ve done in live-streaming video.”

After talking in detail about those new services - and the company’s firm commitment to audio technology - we went on to discuss the company’s growth over the past couple of years.

“We’ve managed to secure the kind of clients that I wouldn’t have believed we’d secure two years ago. And that sort of success has made us a reasonably-attractive proposition for the investment community. We went through an investment round that began a year ago and was closed at the start of this year with the London Business Angels network. It’s sort of Dragon’s Den for grown-ups, I suppose.”

And the secret of ipadio?

“Most people just want technology to be invisible, they just want to use it - and then walk away from it and the job is done. That’s the overriding mission for ipadio: to make things incredibly simple.”

“What we’ve basically done is very elegantly bridged the telephony system into the web. Once the call is made, it’s simply an MP3 file that we can fire around in any way we want; we can cross-post it to social media, stick it inside an embed, punt it off to a telephone number, initiate text messaging... but the essence of what we do is a phone call. Say what you want to say - and then lots of other people can hear that.”

You can listen to the full interview with Mark Smith on our website, via iTunes, by downloading the MP3 file... or on my personal ipadio stream.

Comments

Collapse Expand Comments (0)
You don't have permission to post comments.

Opinion Articles

ExclusiveSmartphones, mobile apps and social networking in medical education

Mark Bridge writes:

I wasn’t supposed to be at this year’s AMEE 2012 conference in Lyon. AMEE is the Association for Medical Education in Europe, which - as you can probably guess - has very little direct connection with the mobile phone industry. However, my wife was going because she works in medical education. Me?  I fancied a trip to France.

ExclusiveEe-ee-ee, says Everything Everywhere

Mark Bridge writes:

Mobile networks have changed, haven’t they?

Once they were all about delivering service. Coverage. Quality. Price. Now it’s much more about branding.

Everything Everywhere has announced it’s to become EE, an obvious abbreviation that’s been used in mobile industry briefings pretty much since the company was created two years ago. It joins the likes of Kentucky Fried Chicken, Hennes & Mauritz, British Home Stores, Independent Television and Marks & Spencer, although all of these took decades to transition into businesses that were just described by their initials.

ExclusiveLast week at The Fonecast: 10th September 2012

Mark Bridge writes:

It’s a smartphone autumn, as prophesied a few weeks ago by the Carphone Warehouse and many others. The frenzy of big-name announcements led by Samsung at Berlin’s IFA has given way to stand-alone media presentations from Nokia, Motorola and Amazon.

ExclusiveWith instant-pay apps, wallets can stay home

Ted Landphair of voanews.com writes:

A lot of people gave up carrying much cash a long time ago, since they knew ‘plastic’ - a credit or debit card, or a store or public transit ‘smart card’ - would be accepted just about everywhere.

But to hear tech companies tell it, plastic cards will be museum pieces as well before long.

ExclusiveLast week at The Fonecast: 27th August 2012

Mark Bridge writes:

It was a week of dramatic contrasts in the mobile phone industry. We started with Everything Everywhere’s news that 4G service was coming to the UK this year – possibly with a new brand that’ll work alongside Orange and T-Mobile. Meanwhile Three UK seems to have its own plans that involve acquiring some excess 4G spectrum from Everything Everywhere. There was much muttering from Vodafone and O2, although whether this’ll manifest itself as legal action remains to be seen.

RSS
First3233343537394041Last

Recent Podcasts

ExclusivePodcast from Mobile World Congress 2015

Mark Bridge learns about the mobile technology trends at Mobile World Congress 2015 by chatting to James Rosewell of 51Degrees, Dr Kevin Curran from the IEEE and Chris Millington of Doro.

They talk about wearable devices, wireless charging, mobile operating systems and much more... including some of their favourite products from the exhibition.

ExclusiveLooking back at February: from security scares to multiple MVNOs

We're taking a look back at the biggest mobile industry news stories from February 2015, including allegations that the UK's security service tried to breach SIM card security by hacking into one of the world's biggest SIM producers.

We also talk about the planned BT and EE merger, the creation of two new UK virtual networks, some acquisitions in the mobile payment arena and a new Ubuntu smartphone.

ExclusiveA month of mobile: O2 counts on 3, Microsoft counts to 10 and Apple counts its profits

We're back with a month of mobile industry news, including takeover talks and takeover rumours. O2 and Three are said to be discussing a merger... but is there any truth in the suggestions that BlackBerry could be up for grabs?

We also discuss Apple's record-breaking quarterly figures, the highlights of CES and the launch of Microsoft Windows 10, as well as saying farewell to the current version of Google Glass.

RSS
12345678910Last

Follow thefonecast.com

Archive Calendar

«July 2026»
MonTueWedThuFriSatSun
293012345
6789101112
13141516171819
20212223242526
272829303112
3456789

Archive