04 February

Pyramid Scheme: how mobile proliferation will rock our world beyond Cairo

February 04, 2011 by admin
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Keops, in quieter times...

Keops (aka Khufu) was built in the 4th Dynasty for the Pharaoh du jour. Messages carved in stone unanimously glorified the ruler and were hard to read.

Oh what a difference 4,500 years can make.

Tomorrow’s Egypt  is emerging 140 characters at a time, as cartouches have been traded for mobile phones and information is no longer the sole ward of the state. On my trip down the Nile awhile back, I was amazed to learn that controlled messaging dates back to Ramses III. They literally chiselled off hieroglyphs when power changed… and the new ruler appropriated the legends of his predecessors. No one dared challenge what was written in stone, as long as the Big Man had the muscle to enforce the message —  and the masons who chiseled them. Whispers of discontent certainly existed, but never reached very far beyond those stones.

Today the whispers travel in a different way: posted in Facebook and Twitter, they come with damning video.  They ricochet across oceans in milliseconds. And they gain momentum, swaying the mob, quickly. Raw and short, they gain credibility if accurate, and if not, are quickly debunked. The crowd usually polices itself and it’s messages. And those crowds form and disperse, online and in the real world, through the networks they have built. (Moment of  irony to prove the point: Cellufun’s Call of the Pharoah has 250,000 uniques per month, and it’s only a mobile game with virtual coins at stake.) Take those networks away, as Mubarak did in his version of “The Night the Lights went out in Georgia”, and the locals only get more upset, while abroad, the human rights activists rally.

And while it may all seem a fickle virtual world, I think it’s just the speed of information that is making things look volatile.  Nothing happened fast when reported by chisel, but things DID evolve once the word got around. So the world grinds on, but the pace keeps quickening. And while these numbers sound awesome, fast and large, I think the ways that we use mobile is still in its infancy. Cisco seems to agree in this week’s white paper, expecting 25x growth for mobile data over the next 5 years. The graph simply goes up and to the right, like the pyramids. (More on who pays for all this, in another post).

And so, whoever leads Egypt, will have to drop the chisel and respect the smartphone. Word gets around, the pace only gets faster from here and dark shadows are getting harder to find.

5 Responses to “Pyramid Scheme: how mobile proliferation will rock our world beyond Cairo”

  1. August 26, 2011 at 3:17 pm, The upside of disaster: good time to learn Twitter. | Miles To Go. said:

    [...] an impromptu info-sharing point, as happened in the California fires and the Chinese earthquake. Worked pretty well in Cairo Damascus, Tripoli and London. Hell, twitter [...]

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  2. September 05, 2011 at 1:16 pm, Seriously, Syria? | Miles To Go. said:

    [...] about sums up the Assad’s strategy for dealing the outbreak of “Arab Spring” in Syrian towns as it continues into “who’s next to Fall, this…Fellow Americans know so very little about the little country wedged between Lebanon and Iraq. I [...]

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  3. September 23, 2011 at 7:20 am, This is the Berlin Wall, and we are Moscow… UN’s 63rd Fall Session ushers in a new reality | Miles To Go. said:

    [...] that the Arab Spring has set in motion a Rube Goldberg progression with no known end result. What Cairo unleashed was the power of  mobile social media among restless people, aided by the most unlikely of news [...]

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  4. March 16, 2012 at 10:31 am, Flintstones vs. Jetsons: Mobile data will be the new have/have not gap | Miles To Go. said:

    [...] inflection point in our history, where people, countries, leaders (and entire industries) are choosing to go Flintsone or Jetson. And the catalyst for this decision is, clearly, the smart phone and the data it generates. The [...]

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  5. April 11, 2012 at 2:52 pm, Don Draper is back, just in time to see Ad Men yield to M’ad Men | Miles To Go. said:

    [...] of no-where, people are now spending 10% of their total screen time on a mobile device. People are starting revolutions, looking up recipes, avoiding disasters, and of course watching MadMen videos on mobile devices. [...]

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