AWS Meeting—Zumobi

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The last company to present during last week’s AWS event was Zumobi. Spun out of Microsoft Research in 2006, Zumobi is betting on superphones such as iPhone, Android and Palm Pre as platforms for mobile application-based advertising. According to John SanGiovanni, Zumobi co-founder and VP of Product Design, superphones sport full fidelity browsers, robust SDKs, 3G speeds, as well as GPS capability. Given superphones’ capacity for high-end processing and rendering, branded mobile applications rather than display banners constitute the most important mobile advertising inventory.

Zumobi got its first taste of cloud computing with AWS through the 2008 Summer Olympics. Lenovo and Intel were the main sponsors for branded mobile apps that needed to stay in synch with the evolving action in Beijing in terms of updating scores and provoding other context tual information. With the large amount of stored data that needed to be accessed rapidly, Zumobi started out with Amazon S3 as its primary data store for the Olympics. That experience led to the next branded project which was working on the Xbox 360 launch for Microsoft. For that project, Zumobi tried out EC2 for the first time. They also worked on their own back-end to tune some of their internal load balancing systems to accommodate the Amazon infrastructure. Then came work with American Idol which pushed the AWS partnership harder as scale and speed requirements co-mingled. By that time, roughly 7-9 months ago, Zumobi decided to port nearly all of its operational infrastructure over to AWS.

Aside from the evolution of the Zumobi/AWS relationship, John focused on how to parse some of the blizzard of iPhone and other superphone statistics spit out by the research industry and the media. There may well be over 1 billion apps downloaded from the iPhone app store. But the vast majority of these are “transient” apps (e.g. beer sloshing and fart sounds), meaning that they live isolated on the mobile device for a limited period of time and then are uninstalled. There is very little scope for network interaction.

Zumobi places its future on mobile applications in which there is a strong content anchor. By that, John meant that there is a recurring, refreshing dose of content that keeps the app active and conversing with a network service. Hence, a branded app from REI that allows a skier to source snow conditions on selected resorts fits the criteria. Zumobi partners heavily with media companies to get rich recurring content to fuel the app, drive the engagement with the user, and increase the value of the mobile app to a potential sponsor.

The issue brought up by superphones is that now, the bar is raised for recurring content to include video, real-time data, images all of which point to massive scalability issues with a mobile app. “In order for us to build a network of superphone applications, having a flexible data center is absolutely imperative”, he says. In concrete terms, John said that going wholesale with AWS has eliminated fixed costs (as a matter of course) , and save around 80% in variable costs. Along with the costs savings , SanGiovanni notes that Quality of Service, Quality Assurance, and geo-location functions have been greatly improved.

Of cource, whether this is a match made in heaven will be decided once Zumobi launches a major app right as AWS has a hiccup. I’ll be curious to see how the company plans for disaster recovery having put so many eggs into the same basket. That said, the fact that AWS was able to produce a clean example of a customer putting their operational destiny on the line is worth noting.

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