Author Archives: Amit

Whats cooking in Pakistan’s Internet / Web2.0 industry?

(This post is in response to a tip-off from Shahid Rana, one of the readers of Webyantra from Pakistan. He helped me compile this post as well)

Ever wondered what’s happening in the internet & Web2.0 space across the border in Pakistan? The internet base there is supposed to be app 3 million subscribers (most of which is dialup with only 100K broadband subscribers). The software exports out of Pakistan are galloping at 60% albeit on a small base ($116 million against previous years US$72 million). These numbers off course do not compare with India, yet there’s a fair bit of activity happening in the tech space there. Here’s a bunch of disparate facts/datapoints that would put things slightly in perspective, specially for an Indian audience.

Pakistans’ equivalent of TiE
– The Organisation for Pakistani Entrepreneurs (OPEN) in Silicon Valley is possibly their equivalent of TiE. Launched in 2001, OPEN has chapters across major American cities. They do not seem to be having chapters in Pakistan though (please correct me if I am wrong) but are getting Pakistani startups to showcase their wares to the tech community in Silicon Valley as this report indicates.

TiE’s Pakistan Chapters
– On its part, TiE has recently (June 08) launched its Islamabad chapter, making it the third city where they are present in Pakistan (Lahore & Karachi being the other two). Details here. While TiE is a global body, it has a distinct Indian origin. And this is interesting trivia- the “Indus” in TiE (The Indus Entrepreneurs) refers to the erstwhile Indus Valley Civilization from the Indian sub continent, which actually now falls in Pakistan.

Tech News & Blogs – One of the most widely read Pakistani techology blogs is Green & White, which covers software, telecom, marketing, advertising etc and has a sub section for Pakistan tech startups. WiredPakistan is another good blog and so are Tech Lahore & IT Tazee. TelecomPk is a very well written blog about the telecom industry in Pakistan. Add them to your RSS reader if you want to keep abreast of whats happening across the border.

Web 2.0 / Internet – One of the Pakistani startups to have made its mark in the Web 2.0 space is the Islamabad based Scrybe, the Flash/Flex based product that launched in 2006. Built originally to be an online calendar application, they seem to be evolving into an online productivity suite. Scrybe has received Series A funding from Adobe Systems in 2007.

Another company that deserves mention is Naseeb Networks, which runs a battery of websites. This includes Naseeb.com which is claimed to be the world’s largest social network for muslims, Rozee which is supposed to be the largest online recruitment website in Pakistan and RingPakistan which is into calling cards and telehony products. Naseen has recently raised Series B venture funding from two Silicon Valley venture Capital firms – ePlanet Ventures (ePlanet) and Draper Fisher Jurvetson (DFJ).

Naseeb (the social network) incidentally has a basic free version, but many of the features that are standard in social networking sites (e.g. browse profiles invisibly) are available only if you sign up as a paid premium member. Details here.

Online Job space – Check out this slide deck from BrightSpyre, one of the biggest Pakistani online job portals. The other notables ones are Rozee & Mustakbil, and Alexa seems to suggest that Rozee is a clear leader amongst the three, inspite of what the deck claims about BrightSpyre.



Resource List
– For a list of technology resources and service providers in Pakistan, check out this & this.

If you have other things to add here, please leave it behind in the comments and I’ll update the post.

Observer… turns your mobile phone into a remote monitoring camera

MultiEyeVision, a Pune based company has launched a tool called Observer that turns mobile phones into remote monitoring cameras. The camera’s images can be viewed from any internet connected device. You need a GPRS enable smartphone for this, or you can buy a pre-configured mobile phone from them (which works just like a normal cellphone otherwise).

How does it work? You need to download and install the Observer software on your mobile phone (or use the pre configured mobile phone sold by the company). Once thats done, just start the application and point it where you want to shoot. The streamed images are viewable from your account on their website; you can also control the settings of the observer (capture frequency, picture resolution, capture timings) from the web. The images can be stored for viewing later or even get emailed to you at specific times. The tool/software can run continually for 48 to 72 hours after which it needs to be restarted. On battery, it runs for 4-8 hours.

What the Observer does not support is video streaming, due to the limitations of GPRS (which requires higher transfer speeds). It can however transmit image streams upto a rate of 3 images per minute, which is adequate for many situations. The Observer is aimed at a variety of consumer or business use cases.

The pre configured phones are based on Nokia & Sony-Ericcson models (Nokia 3500, Nokia 6300 & Sony Ericcson W810i) and cost between 8K-12 K INR. For using the software with your own phone, you’d need to pay 2.5K INR.

In fact, if there are unused mobile phones lying with you, they can be configured as well for this application. Details here.