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Posted Tuesday, 5 February 2008
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Hawaiian Telcom CEO Mike Ruley was dismissed yesterday. His replacement is Stephen Cooper, co-founder or Kroll Zolfo Cooper, a New York City-based interim management firm. Cooper is best known as the Enron’s CEO during the company’s bankruptcy. Today’s Star-Bulletin article has a brief biography of Cooper. Kevin Nystrom, a senior director at KZC, will join HawTel as COO.
While Cooper stated in today’s Honolulu Advertiser that HawTel is not a “distressed company”, it’s now clear that the Carlyle Group is unhappy with their acquisition’s performance. HawTel has lost thousands of subscribers to mobile carriers and Time Warner Oceanic’s VoIP services, leading to US$137 million in financial losses since 2006. I mentioned some of the operational issues on my old blog on 16 November 2006, and last week BusinessWeek discussed how market forces have affected the US telecom industry overall.
The Advertiser noted that Ruley put his Kahala home on the market in early January, which is a possible indication that changes were coming at HawTel. The company has eliminated over 100 management positions since October 2007.
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Posted Tuesday, 5 February 2008
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This site is now available in a mobile web format at http://m.billso.com/ – please give it a try with your mobile phone or PDA.
Apple iPhone users can view this site in its regular desktop mode at billso.com, or try the mobile version.
As I mentioned on 27 November 2007, the mobile web is not quite ready for the masses yet. There is no standard URL for mobile web sites, for example. Some sites like Facebook use “m.” as a subdomain that serves up a mobile site. Other mobile sites are using the .mobi top level domain. I have a short list of mobile web sites at http://billso.com/mobile/
I own http://billso.mobi and I’ve set that name to redirect to http://m.billso.com
It’s difficult to design web sites that resolve well on small screens, especially given the number of different devices, platforms and carriers that exist in the mobile Internet market.
Difficult does not mean impossible
I’ve tweaked my web site with some WordPress plug-ins. Plug-ins are prepackaged files of PHP programming code that third-parties have written to extend the WordPress blog software. I’ve made m.billso.com work on several hundred pages of content with 3 hours of effort.
The mobile version does load quickly on PDAs and phones, while preserving most of the site content. Those were my primary goals. I’m pleased with what I’ve accomplished using free software and web services.
Feel free to log on with a real computer and leave a comment about the mobile site. I’d like to know if the mobile version of this site is usable and useful for my readers.
A few of the site’s features do not work well on the mobile version. I’m looking for workarounds to address some of these problems.
- The menu on the top of each page becomes a long set of entries.
- The event calendar in the right sidebar turns into a single column of text, for example. This happens with the standard WordPress calendar widget, too.
- Tables do not resolve well in mobile browsers, either. That’s one reason that the calendars on the Spring 2008 course pages are written in a boring text format.
- The scenic image at the top of each page shrinks a bit.
- Mobile users cannot enter comments. The reCAPTCHA plugin that I use to stop comment spam does not support mobile web browsers. The comment fields will appear on the mobile site, but comments will not be posted. i’ve seen very few mobile blogs that support comment entry, so I am not very worried about fixing this issue.
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