2009 29
Open source SMS alarm with the Fonera
Published by MartinVarsavsky.net in Fon with No Comments
I’ve been told about this interesting open source project (article in Spanish) with the Fonera. It consists of an alarm that is activated via an RF emitter (of the kind that are used to open garage doors) and sends an SMS to a mobile number of your choice.
It can be useful for elderly people in need of assistance or shop owners who want to alert someone of a robbery.
The only equipment needed is an RF emitter, a receiver and a Fonera with the OpenWrt firmware.
2009 5
Twitter “Customer Care” at Fon is Fonwifi
Published by MartinVarsavsky.net in Fon with No Comments

- Image via Wikipedia
At Fon we are Fonwifi in Twitter. But it so happens that naturally FonWiFi is evolving from being us telling news about Fon to quickly becoming a first help site for customer care. We were not prepared for this but as thousands of Fonera 2.0 get shipped around the world we are doing what we can to answer. So long as people understand that it is not meant to be our customer care we are cool with it.
As far as the Fonera is concerned yes, we admit it, we can´t get the Bittorrent to work well. Megaupload works fine, and so does Rapidshare. You can also download by cutting and pasting links. You can even download when away from home by entering your fonera using DynDNS. You can also upload HD videos to Youtube, pictures to Flickr, Picasa, Facebook, convert 3G to WiFi, connect printers and webcams to it. But we do apologize about Bittorrent. It´s not that it does not work. Bittorrent is like loading 3 people on a donkey. Sometimes it moves…but sometimes it just crashes. Everything else requires less resources.
In any case the Fonera is open source and we welcome all help to fix that app as you enjoy the others which is still not bad for 49 euros plus shipping.

- Image via Wikipedia
Germany is Europe’s largest economy and a key market for FON. People in Germany love FON and the Fonero community there is very active. However, FON’s WiFi footprint in Germany is smaller than in other European countries, like the UK and France, where our Telco partners have helped us grow. Fon´s partnership with E-Plus, is about to change that. Today FON is announcing a partnership with the E-Plus group in Germany. With more than 18 million subscribers and annual revenues of 3.2 billion Euros, the E-Plus group is Germany’s third largest mobile operator. E-Plus is part of KPN group and is considered an innovator in the German mobile Telco market. E-Plus will help the FON community grow in Germany with a planned series of joint activities starting this year. For example, E-Plus will install Foneras in more than 300 E-Plus stores in prime locations throughout Germany. Together, FON and E-plus will target cafes and other public places where we will install FON Spots as part of the “City FON” initiative – similar to the “Chueca WiFi” and “Shoreditch” density projects in Spain and England. E-Plus will promote FON to their 18 Million subscribers and will help us to encourage them to become Foneros. E-Plus customers who register for the collaboration will be eligible for discounts on Foneras and will get free trial access to the FON WiFi network and once they installed their Fon routers they will be able to roam the world for free connecting to other Foneros.
The FON E-Plus partnership is great for two reasons. E-Plus has great marketing power that will increase FON awareness and help the German FON community grow faster. E-Plus is the first pure mobile operator to partner with FON. Initially journalists and bloggers had argued that Fon would be stopped by fixed and mobile operators. Some of these experts confused Fon with a P2P telco network. But the difference here is that while P2P networks destroy value for the music labels, Fon increases value to telcos. How? Well, as our partnership with BT, known as BTfon, and others have shown, Fon generates value both for consumers and telcos. For consumers the proposition is clear, you share some extra, limited, bandwidth at home in a secure way with a second SSID or WiFi signal, and in return you roam the world for free. For fixed telcos, Fon increases customer loyalty, reduces churn, reduces customer acquisition costs. Fon enabled fixed operators can also resist price decreases as their customers have WiFi at home and everywhere else.
Now, for mobile operators, the one big benefit of Fon is reduced capex (investment in the network). 3G is a phenomenal service because of its coverage and frankly no matter how many hotspots we put, Fon will never compete with 3G in terms of coverage. So customers who want to have Internet in a car or to find it no matter where they are will always have to use 3G. But when there is WiFi, there are now tons of mobile phones that have a WiFi option, including the iPhone, Nokias, Samsungs, HTCs and others. And use of WiFi is advantageous to operators because: customers are happy with the speeds, they pay their monthly service anyway and they don´t use the much costlier 3G infrastructure. 3G is great for operators for voice and light data. But when people start downloading 300MB movies and TV series to watch in their mobile devices, operators either have to charge for that bandwidth making movies expensive, or prefer that people use WiFi. Moreover, some of the most popular gadgets in the world, such as the Nintendo DS, the PSP and so on, only come with WiFi. In this way, E-Plus can now service its customers on all of their connected devices.
All in all, this proves a point I have been making for a long time. FON and Mobile Telcos make great partners. WiFi is a complement to 3G. Moreover, we are very excited that this announcement coincides with the launch of the Fonera 2.0. The Fonera 2.0 has just been introduced in Germany (not yet in the UK) and it is a router that not only gives you free roaming but also manages your transfers to the Internet. Fonera 2.0 on its own sends your videos to Youtube, your pictures to Flickr, downloads your files from Rapidshare or Megaupload, or Bittorrent (disclosure this app is working poorly at the moment) and it is especially good for converting 3G signal from HSDPA modules to WiFi.
If you would like to interview me about this announcement please use the contact form of this blog and I will be happy to answer questions.

2009 4
We ran out of stock in the Fonera 2.0. Why did you not get one?
Published by MartinVarsavsky.net in Fon with No Comments
Sorry, the Fonera 2.0 is out of stock. The next ones will arrive in a month. In the meantime, we at Fon are not only interested in those who bought a Fonera 2.0 but in those who did not buy one. So I prepared a poll for those who were not attracted by the offer to help us improve the product and the message when the new stocks arrive and as we develop future Foneras.
2009 23
Fonera 2.0 coverage in Blogs and Media
Published by MartinVarsavsky.net in Fon with No Comments
I would like to share what’s been said in blogs and media since we announced the Fonera 2.0 launch. The reviews are very positive and early sales are strong. But selling a lot of hardware without advertising is close to a miracle. Especially in the midst of a global crisis. So let´s hope the word of mouth after our first deliveries is enough to sustain the sales. The articles are in the languages I understand.
Wired, boing boing, PR News, Gearlog, dv-depot, pc mag, Endgadget, Gizmologia, Gizmología again, Zdnet, Canard WiFi, Hoy Teconología, Oss Blog, UNIVERS FREEBOX, Mac4Ever, Harakiwi, Planet Sansfil, Francofon, Minitosh, MacBidouille, Presence-PC, LordPhoenix’s Blog, i974, Infracom Online, ICWS, keneto.net, Perfil.com, Frageek, Clubic, Francofon, Harakiwi, mrboo, Fredzone, Brico-WiFi, Couleur Geek, Gonzague, GreenIT, Zicmama’s Blog, Netbook 3G, Webtuga, yebo blog, TooLinux, Soy Plastic, Il Bloggatore, BandaAncha, Xataca, País Cambiante
During our last trip to Morocco which resulted in our engagement, Nina and I both took Netbooks. She took her fancy MacBookAir. I took the MSI Wind that my friends had turned into an amazing triple combo of Mac, plus Ubuntu, plus Windows XP.
Yes, I know it sounds crazy, but thanks to a special install by some friends, this 400 euros machine runs all three operating systems. And on top of that the battery lasted over twice as much as the MacBook Air, it has 3 USB ports instead of one and for pictures it had a great SD slot that of course Apple would never install because it would ruin its hardware aesthetics. In the desert climate, with a rare connection to electricity, frequent dust and sand, the MSI Wind performed like a star. Why am I telling you this?
Because when I shared my enthusiasm with Jordi Vallejo, from Fon, he told me that the managers at MSI Wind loved Fon and it turned out that this was the case cause they loved the idea of doing a Fonera 2.0 / MSI Wind bundle which we launched today in France, Italy and Spain with more countries coming soon.
Basically, we are selling both the MSI Wind and the Fonera 2.0 for only 379 euros introductory price. I hope you like the MSI Wind as much as I do, because it has become my portable computer of choice beating not only the MacBook Air, but all the other netbooks I tested including the Dell Mini and the Asus EeePC. Here´s the link to order the bundle in Spain.
I would also like to share with you what the blogs say about the Fonera. And for technical questions I recommend you read this.
Wired, boing boing, PR News, Gearlog, dv-depot, pc mag, Endgadget

2009 16
Outlook for ’09 at Fon
Published by MartinVarsavsky.net in Fon with No Comments
We are now facing the toughest environment that I have ever seen for start ups. We have gone from financial markets and VCs willing to finance dreams to a “show me the money” reality that will force start ups to close their doors if they can´t delivere. Fearing this new scenario and warned ahead of time by our investors at Allen and Co, I started cutting costs at Fon during early 08. The cutting was severe, we let go around half of our people, we shrank from around 90 employees around the world to 40 now. Moreover we stopped subsidizing our hardware. But surprisingly the combination of employee reductions with subsidy ends was still accompanied with tremendous revenue growth and now it is almost sure that Fon will start making money this year.
Fon earns margin out of two different sources, telecom sales, meaning people who are not WiFi donors but require WiFi and pay per hour, day or 5 days, and buyers of our hardware, the Fon WiFi routers, our social routers known as La Fonera or Foneras in plural.
In terms of telco sales last week was FON’s best week ever. After a tough winter in which both hardware and telco sales were shrinking, telco sales turned around and grew from 30K to 47K euros per week in the last 4 weeks alone: this is 50% revenue growth over the average winter week. Revenues and hotspot growth is mainly coming from BT and Zon in Portugal but it is also coming from many countries around the world. Our best countries are UK, France, Japan, Portugal, and Germany. Why was the winter so bad for us? I think that the global crisis “froze” people for a while and now they are relaxing their spending again. Also WiFi is partly an outdoor product and the winter is bad for us in general. We were also hit by the pound´s collapse against the euro which fortunately is now reversing.
On the hardware side FON’s outlook is bright. We have over 3000 pre ordered Fonera 2.0. We will start selling the Fonera 2.0 in Europe on April 21st. Due to cash conservation we have been very cautious in ordering stocks of the Fonera 2.0, but now it looks like we have been overly cautious. If you google Fonera 2.0 you will see that we are getting a lot of pre release reviews and that not a single one is negative. Tech bloggers and journalists appreciates a router that not only has the basic Fon functionality of free WiFi roaming and allowing its owner to make money from it but the more advance functionality of taking care of your uploading and downloading while your computer is off. They also like the 3G to WiFi conversion capability as many gadgets, especially gaming gadgets come with WiFi but not with 3G.
So now that we have shrank our monthly expenditures from 700K in Jan 08 to 210K euros per month now and are growing revenues so fast, it looks like we will break even this summer. If we do we will be a sustainable, profitable company which is the only guarantee of survival in an environment of cash starvation.
Bottom line is that we are not out of the desert yet, but we are getting close.
2009 3
The Fonera 2.0 can help you save money and reduce CO2 emissions
Published by MartinVarsavsky.net in Fon with No Comments
According to this PC Energy report, US organizations alone waste $2.8 billion every year powering 108 million unused PCs, responsible for approximately 20 million tons of carbon dioxide emissions, roughly equivalent to the emissions of 4 million cars. PCs and monitors are 39% of total ICT emissions worldwide (that account to 2% of the total emissions), equivalent, according to the PC Energy report, to a full year of CO2 emissions from approximately 43.9 million cars. If all the world’s 1 billion PC’s were powered down for just one night, says the PC Energy report, it would save enough energy to light up New York City’s Empire State Building for more than 30 years.
There’s a very simple action anybody can take to reduce emissions and cut energy costs: turn your PC off at night or when it’s not being used. Our Fonera 2.0 can be really helpful for this purpose: if you usually keep your PC on all night to download/upload content from the Net, the Fonera 2.0 can take care of downloading files from BitTorrent, Megaupload and Rapidshare and uploading your pictures and videos to Flickr, Picasa and Youtube, letting you turn off your PC at night, thus significantly reducing your energy consumption and CO2 emissions. If you believe turning your computer off and on every day will somehow damage it, or won’t help you reduce your energy comsumption, read this article from Microsoft.
But how much money can you save? Say you keep a desktop PC, consuming around 100 W, powered up day and night to download content from the Net. If the average price in Europe for a kilowatt hour is €0,18, your PC will cost you around €157 per year. Using a Fonera 2.0 you could keep your PC on for only 10 hours a day, and the Fonera will do the downloading/uploading for you during the night, using only around 3 watts. You’ll save €89 in one year and pay back the €49 investment to buy your Fonera 2.0 in less then 7 months. Furthermore, every year you’ll avoid producing 355 kilograms of CO2. Your PC left on day and night would otherwise emit 629 kg of CO2 in one year, equivalent to driving a BMW X3 SUV for 3600km. Turning your PC off at night and using your Fonera 2.0 for downloading will bring your CO2 emissions down to 273kg per year.
2009 3
Fon Pineapple
Published by MartinVarsavsky.net in Fon with No Comments
2009 3
Fonera 2.0 goes for sale on April 21st in Europe
Published by MartinVarsavsky.net in Fon with No Comments
Yesterday we had our first in person presentation of the Fonera 2.0. It was in Paris. During this presentation I announced that the Fonera 2.0 will go for sale everywhere in Europe on April 21st. USA and Japan, Hong Kong and Taiwan will start in May. The promotional price for the launch will be 49 euros.
Here´s a video in English that explains some of what the Fonera 2.0 does which is basically to upload and download while you take your computer somewhere else and to convert 3G to WiFi.
Here´s a video of the event. It is in my poor French which is only as bad as Emilio Botín´s English as you can see in this video. In case you don´t know who Emilio Botin is he is the CEO of Banco Santander.
The unofficial unveiling was very understated and included pasta dinner, Spanish wines and French Cheeses at my Paris flat in Place des Vosges. Nina and my two sons were there. In an informal atmosphere with discussed the pros and pros of this new product (sorry, I just can´t get to say pros and cons). Reaction of the unveiling in my Spanish blog was very negative probably because we did not do the unveiling in Spain but then the French have adopted Fon in bigger numbers something the Spanish Foneros still can´t stomach.
Here are some pictures of the event.
Here´s one of the articles that were published after the event that includes a comparison chart.
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