
I got an email from a fellow named Shawn McCollum asking me to take a look at his new mobile site, Wampad.com. I believe that Shawn has actually created a new type of mobile site - a search based portal. The basic concept is that you enter a search phrase once and then use it to query a bunch of different sites.
Wampad's front page is simplicity itself. There's just a drop down, a text box and a Go button. You chose a type of search from the drop down, type something in the text box and press the button.
So what kinds of things can you do with Wampad? Well for one, you can go to a website. If you choose "Website" from the drop down, enter "wapreview" and then press the button - you get a screen with four links; "Search for wapreview", "go to www.wapreview.com", "Go to www.wapreview.net" and "Go to www.wapreview.org". So you have potentially saved yourself some typing. This may not be a big deal - many mobile browsers will add the "www." and ".com" to an address if you leave them off - but that doesn't help for .net or .org. But there's a lot more. If go back to the Wampad front page, your search text is still there, at least with most browsers, and you can make a different selection from the drop down. There are 18 choices; 

That's a lot of choices, perhaps too many, but you can customize Wampad to remove any of the search types that you don't use and change the order in which they appear.
Wampad provides a consistent interface to many different sites. It also speeds searching by allowing you to use the same query string against multiple sites without having to retype it. This is a real help as most phones (except smartphones) don't offer copy and paste. Even Opera Mini, as great as it is, doesn't support cut and paste. Mobile web users tend to avoid entering text and in fact the W3C's
Mobile Web Best Practices 1.0 document urges mobile developers to minimize text entry. Yet for tasks involving searching, a text query is generally the most efficient and often the only practical way to perform the search - think getting the definition of a word, tracking a flight or bringing up a MySpace user's page. Wampad lets users reuse what they have already entered, saving effort. It's not un-common to search for the same word across multiple search engines, the encyclopedia and the dictionary. Users tend to use the same user name on multiple social sites like Flickr, MySpace,
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posted by Dennis Bournique
May 2, 2006 @ 8:52 pm
7 View Comments