Yahoo! Go Examined

With the arrival of Yahoo! and its Yahoo! Go Mobile 2.0 product, another A-list brand has entered the market. Yahoo!’s presence, like Apple’s, expands the number of ODP (On-Device Portal) choices available to consumers, offering data services that are embedded directly onto the devices that people carry with them every day, similar to the desktop applications that people have downloaded on their PCs.

So, how does Yahoo! Go stack up?

It draws on many ODP cues to deliver some interesting usability features. However, its drawbacks serve as cautionary examples for other companies considering the launch of their own mobile on-device portals.

Yahoo! Go’s Advantages
Yahoo! clearly understands that its mobile user experience will make or break its mobile offering. With Yahoo! Go, Yahoo! relies on the power of ODP to deliver that experience, effectively bringing the Yahoo! desktop experience to the mobile device. Yahoo! Go delivers the following capabilities:

Yahoo! Go’s Gotchas
Just about any mobile application is going to have its weak points, and Yahoo! Go is no exception. Interestingly, a few of its downfalls result from Yahoo!’s incomplete embrace of the ODP philosophy, causing Yahoo! Go to fall victim to many of the early mistakes that hindered some of the original ODP market offerings.

Yahoo! Go’s Future
Yahoo! has made a solid first attempt at delivering a mobile user experience that offers many of the usability benefits that ODP technology brings to the table. How Yahoo! plans to monetize Yahoo! Go isn’t clear. Perhaps it isn’t important to the company. What should be important to Yahoo! is how to further simplify personalization, enable PIM integration, and support streaming media. And if Yahoo! Go is going to run on mass-market handsets, it must appeal to all mobile users – those with Yahoo! accounts and those without.

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