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FeedHenry Web 2.0 Start-Page

FeedHenry's Web 2.0 Start-Page provides a widget based broadband portal. FeedHenry Widgets are web based, graphical services that, for example, show the user the latest news, current weather, a dictionary, a map, sticky notes, or even a language translator, among other things. FeedHenry provides a number of Telecoms widgets out-of-the-box including: SMS, Instant Messaging, and IMS (IP Multimedia Subsystem) based call control, VoIP and Video.

For subscribers FeedHenry Widgets offer the following benefits:

  • A view of all their favorite personalised Operator services, information and content in one place - with live updates
  • Real-time alerts to Web and Mobile when new information is available
  • A stickiness to the Web and Mobile offering that brings them back time and again and 1-Click access to content
  • Exclusive Operator content that can not be sourced anywhere else (where provided)
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FeedHenry Mobile 2.0

FeedHenry Mobile 2.0 is:

  • A rich, next generation, stand alone, Mobile 2.0 (mobile Internet) site
  • A series of optional, downloadable handset applications

FeedHenry Mobile 2.0 enables:

  • 1-Click content discovery / 1-Click content consumption
  • Real-time, personalised content

FeedHenry Mobile 2.0 will:

  • Drive increased mobile Internet usage
  • Drive increased ARPU through Mobile Advertising
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End to End Solution

FeedHenry provides a full end-to-end Web 2.0 and Mobile 2.0 solution for Operators.

FeedHenry Widget Hosting Services:

  • Branded Carrier Web based start-page for widgets
  • Branded Carrier mobile start-page for widgets
  • Desktop widget environment -enables widgets to be dragged off Web and dropped onto the desktop - retains Carrier branding

FeedHenry Widget Services:

  • Widget API (based on W3C standards)
  • Widget lifecycle management tools - creation, provisioning, discovery and retirement

FeedHenry Core (Enablers) Services:

  • IMS and Parlay enablers (that enable services to be created using simple REST and JavaScript, rather than WS-* web services or SIP Servlets)
  • Feed Aggregation (RSS / ATOM)
  • Identity and subscription management across widgets and enables set-up and personalisation before the subscriber has used the service for the first time
  • Predictive Analytics - e.g. Amazon style recommendations
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Value Proposition

FeedHenry enables Telecoms Carriers that are striving to grow new revenues to:

  • Rapidly launch NetVibes or iGoogle style Web 2.0 Portals (Web and Mobile)
  • Rapidly launch converged Web and Mobile services that leverage:
    • The Operators Network Capabilities
    • The Operators Content Relationships
    • The Operators Service Provider Relationships
    • The "Best-of-the-Web"
  • Generate new revenues through:
    • Increased subscriber adoption and monetisation
    • Converged Web and mobile advertising
    • New services / new revenues
  • Enable the distribution of Operator widgets to the Desktop and to leading Internet destinations such as iGoogle, FaceBook and Yahoo Go!.

FeedHenry is a fully hosted, fully managed solution

  • FeedHenry hosts and manages the service requiring no Capex or Opex investments and this light-touch enables ARPU uplift to start immediately
  • FeedHenry's widget platform can be branded and switched on for a Carrier within a matter of days
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W3C

We are actively working with industry and academic leaders to introduce standards in the field of Web and Mobile applications.

The World Wide Web Consortium (W3C), is the international body responsible for developing Web standards. We at FeedHenry are very excited to be working with the W3C, through our parent organisation the TSSG, to shape the future of widgets through our involvement in the widget standardisation process. We are looking forward to contributing our expertise in developing widgets for both web and mobile web.

In November 2006 the W3C published a draft of the first widget specification which outlined certain key requirements for widgets; scripting, interoperability, security, packaging and deployment. The current draft of this specification can be found at the W3C's site here.