Rumors of a revamped MobileMe service have been coming in a steady stream recently, mostly associated with an alleged "iPhone nano." The previous rumors focused on Apple grafting Lala-like streaming abilities onto the service, but a new report on Wednesday suggests that MobileMe will gain mobile video streaming, location check-ins, and geo-tagging, as well as a personal webpage that friends can check and see what you are up to at that precise moment.

An anonymous source told Cult of Mac that Apple's rumored new MobileMe service will combine the e-mail, contacts, and calendar syncing with new social media services, making it a sort of Facebook, Foursquare, Ustream, and Ping mashup. The current focus is on streaming media and location-based services, though the source said that "a lot of their ideas were shelved for a later date in order to focus on a few of them."

MobileMe users would have a webpage that friends can visit, which would include data pulled from your iPhone, such as current location, recent iTunes tracks, Game Center updates, currently used apps, recent geo-tagged photos, and even live-streamed video. Some information would be pulled automatically from your device, while other items could be shared at your whim. The service is also said to have "comprehensive" privacy controls, so you can control who has access to what bits of data.

The service will also reportedly work with a recently patented location check-in system called iGroups. Friends within an iGroup can get automatic notifications when they are within a certain range of each other, and have access to location updates via the new MobileMe homepage.

The combination of features could have some appeal if Apple can offer a unified, simple user interface and can match the reliability of current services. However, Apple will have its work cut out for it transitioning users away from other, more popular services if Ping's tepid uptake is any indication. If Apple offers straightforward integration with other services—MobileMe check-ins automatically post to FourSquare, or status updates automatically post to Facebook and/or Twitter—then an updated MobileMe might stand a chance of catching on.