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Archive for the 'mobile OS' Category

Wednesday, April 2nd, 2008

I’ve just spent the last couple of days at CTIA (see yesterday’s post). I wanted to present some thoughts I’ve had during that time.

Firstly, it’s been interesting to see the shadow the iPhone casts over everything even though Apple isn’t visibly present at the show. Sprint’s big announcement was around the Samsung Instinct, which is a clear iPhone competitor. But the devices on display were running beta software which was glitchy and slow, and it was clear that - though they have some nifty features - these devices are not a match for the iPhone. AT&T itself had another device which mimics certain aspects of the iPhone - the LG Vu - but it is another poor match for the device on everyone’s minds. Of all the things that people love about the iPhone - the design, the UI, the browser, the ease of use - none of them are matched by most of the devices on display here, even though the manufacturers of those devices have been making phones for far longer than Apple. The Sony Ericsson Xperia X1 showed the most promise of any device I saw at CTIA, but won’t be launched for several months.

And AT&T appears to be keen to cement the thought leadership the iPhone deal has given it. Its announcement that it will deploy Microsoft Surface tabletop computers in some of its stores will further up the cool factor for AT&T and put more pressure on its competitors to find ways to compete. I haven’t seen much from AT&T’s competitors that can match it in terms of providing differentiated experiences on devices or in stores. (I have to admit that throughout the Surface presentation I was thinking about this YouTube video which I first saw a few months back - “take that, Apple”).

I discussed managed mobility services with several players at CTIA, and found broad consensus in several areas. It seems clear that the next several months will see launches from major players including both AT&T and Verizon around managed mobility services, and that a range of factors are coming together to create a fertile environment for uptake of these services. The complexity I have referred to previously in the enterprise mobile arena is creating demand for these services. And technology is now available to enable the supply side, both from specialists like Mformation, Sybase and Nokia/Intellisync and from RIM and Microsoft. Launches in the next few months from those two big carriers and increasing uptake over the next year or two should follow.

“Openness” appears to be becoming the new “convergence” in that it is a term everyone seems to feel compelled to insert into every pitch and keynote despite the fact that it means different things to different people. AT&T still appears frustrated that Verizon has got so much attention for playing catch-up with the GSM world: as Ralph De La Vega (head of AT&T Mobility) put it today, “we were open before open was cool”. But he also suggested AT&T now views Android much more favorably than it did at first, ironically because Android will be “open” to AT&T’s branding and applications in the device UI, rather than being restricted to just Google and open source software. I’m hoping the open thing will soon blow over at least in the form of hype, and that we’ll start to see some significant real moves towards openness. Android will be important to watch when it launches - Texas Instruments is demoing two Android devices here - but it can’t be the only game in town.

Carriers need to get better at explaining that they already offer openness on the RIM, Windows Mobile and Palm platforms, where users get unfettered access to the Internet and the ability to install their own applications. But they also need to find ways to extend that openness all the way down the portfolio for those customers who want that. And they need to stop pretending that “choices” and openness are synonyms. Just because you give your customers a choice between two hand-picked applications does not mean your approach is open. Allowing them to pick the application they want regardless of whether you have endorsed it is. And carriers still have some learning to do in this department.

Overall, the show is as always a nice snapshot of a point in time for the wireless industry. But I hope that by the time the Fall show rolls around we’ll have moved forward in all these areas - compelling devices, managed mobility and openness in particular.

Monday, March 3rd, 2008

Of late, I’ve just been struck by how frequently new software development work is being done for the iPhone - whether it’s LinkedIn’s new mobile interface, Gmail’s latest mobile updates or Remember The Milk’s mobile features. All this is being done for a device with 2% or less of smartphone market share, and which is the only device with its OS. Compare that with other mobile operating systems like Windows Mobile, Symbian, RIM’s OS and even Palm and they all dwarf iPhone’s share.

Now, if I were a developer, I imagine I might quite enjoy the challenge of developing for such an attractive and highly-functional platform. But in doing all this, these developers are tying up finite resources in developing a platform which will serve only a small fraction of the userbase of their web services / sites. And although not all these companies’ mobile development resources are going into iPhone they often seem to launch for that platform first, and roll out the newest and best features there first too. Admittedly, this is partly because the iPhone is a much more capable platform than its competitors, but even so these companies are alienating the 95% plus of their users who are not iPhone owners but do want to use their mobile devices to access their services.

Now, I’m speaking here mainly as a non-iPhone-using mobile user. I resent some of this at a personal level, but that’s neither here nor there in the grand scheme of things. The larger implication is that those other mobile platforms need to take notice of this trend and do something about it. Apple hasn’t released the SDK for the iPhone yet (though that’s imminent) and it has a tiny market share, but even so developers are paying attention and prioritizing iPhone development. This should tell those responsible for other operating systems and device platforms that they have some serious catching up to do in order to attract that kind of energy and attention. Just think what will happen when the iPhone actually has significant market share…