A
bridge to a richer Internet with Nokia Life+
Image if you were an inexperienced user of the mobile internet or perhaps even using the internet for the first time, wouldn't find it a little overwhelming.
How
would you be able to find useful information that was relevant to you, and that
you could use to improve your life in areas such as work, family, money and
health?
Nokia
Life, a service for people who don’t have access to, or cannot afford to use
cellular data, has provided such valuable information to over 76 million people
in India, China, Nigeria and Indonesia.
Now,
a new web application called Nokia Life+ builds on that success to provide
millions more people with easy access to life improvement information.
Nokia
Life+
Nokia
Life+ is supported across a range of basic Nokia handsets, Series 40 phones and
the Asha smartphones, including the recently launched Nokia Asha 308 and Nokia Asha 309.
The
free Nokia Life+ web application can be downloaded from the Nokia Store, or it
can be accessed directly through the new and improved Nokia Xpress
Browser, which compresses data by up to 90%, resulting in faster and
more affordable mobile Internet access.
“What
we noticed is that there is vast amounts of information which is available on
the Internet but this itself does not provide much useful information for
people to consume on their mobile phone. It is still difficult for them to get
relevant services,” says the Vice President and Global Head of Nokia Life,
Jawahar Kanjilal, in an interview with Conversations.
“With
Nokia Life+ we provide a suite of life improvement information services and
allow people easy access to valuable information, which can enable them to
experience a better quality of life.”
A
richer Internet experience
Nokia
Life will continue to exist and to grow side by side with Nokia Life+. It is a
natural progression that people will graduate from SMS services to wanting
richer content and a more web-based experience – this is where Nokia Life+
comes in.
The
service, which is completely free to use (minus the data charges), is available
in English in over 18 countries such as the Philippines, Vietnam, Bangladesh,
South Africa, Malaysia and Kenya.
This global version
of Nokia Life+ has two key services at launch – Life Skills and Live Healthy,
with more to come in the future.- Life Skills helps young people in particular to develop their inter-personal skills, manage their personal finances and how to start running their own business
- Live Healthy offers assistance on how to maintain a healthy lifestyle, preventing and treating common illnesses and information on a wide-range of health topics.
There
are also local versions of Nokia Life+ coming later in Nigeria, China and
India, while Indonesia already has one. They will have local language support
and also localized services that is tailored for each country.
The
ecosystem
An
ecosystem of global and local content partners provides Nokia Life+ with
reliable and accurate information. For example, the Foundation for Social
Change helps
with the personal finance service in ‘Life Skills’.
Nokia
Life and Nokia Life+ works closely with content partners, and also with NGOs
and UN agencies because of the convergence of social development interests.
However,
the original aim, and it remains the case, is to add value to Nokia’s handsets
and to accelerate people into the digital information era – the connecting of
the next billion.
“The
topics that we have chosen sync up very closely with health, education, youth,
women and life skills – all those Millennium Development Goals and orientated
topics,” says Jawahar.
“People
find them relevant in their daily lives. They are utilitarian – it’s not
entertainment or social networking but people still find relevance in those
topics.”
Nokia
Life and now Nokia Life+ are nice examples where you can do good business, and
do some good at the same time.
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