Google June 29 rolled out new mobile applications geared to let users in Uganda,
Africa access health, news, weather and other
information from mobile phones via Short Message Service.
Google already offers SMS services for North America, and has
even added SMS to its Gmail chat tool, though it is currently
down. This new flavor of Google SMS is tailored for Africa, where
phones largely only feature voice and SMS functionality.
Google SMS includes Google SMS Tips, an SMS-based query-and-answer service that
provides a "Web search-like" experience for mobile phone users. This
is crucial for users using cheap cell phones that lack fully
dedicated Web browsers.
Users type in 6001 as a text query to access SMS Tips. Google's algorithms
restructure the query to identify keywords, search a database to identify
relevant answers and return the most relevant answer.
SMS Tips cover information on health care, health clinics, weather forecasts
and critical agricultural information. Google SMS Search
provides news, sports scores and word definitions. Users must text 6006 to
retrieve results.
The suite also includes Google Trader, an e-commerce marketplace application that helps
sellers reach buyers with offers of material goods and jobs, among other
things. Users must text 6007 to access Trader to post or view advertisements
for products and services.
Text queries must not exceed 160 characters, the usual constraint for SMS. Google also warned that the product is far from polished,
requiring improvements in search quality and additions to its health and
farming content.
Joe Mucheru, head of Google Sub-Saharan Africa, and Fiona Lee, Google's Africa
project manager, explained the reason for the suite in a blog post, noting:
It's important to reach users wherever
they are, with the information they need, in areas with the greatest
information poverty. In many places around the world, people look to their
phones, rather than their computers, to find information they need in their
daily lives. This is especially true in Africa, which
has the world's highest mobile growth rate and where mobile phone
penetration is six times Internet penetration. One-third of the population owns
a mobile phone and many more have access to one.
Indeed, due to financial considerations, mobile
phones remain the main gateway Africans use to access the Web.
Accordingly, Google is providing SMS tailored for Africa
to tap the incredibly green field of mobile computing, another fork in the
search engine giant's long, winding road to organize the world's information on
the Internet.
Google is already the leader in search on the desktop and would love to
duplicate that success on the so-called third screen, where it is vying for
supremacy with Yahoo, Microsoft and other Web services providers.
ReadWriteWeb's Frederic Lardinois has more information on Google's partners
for Google SMS here, or see more coverage on TechMeme here.