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显示标签为“smartphones”的博文。显示所有博文

2011年2月13日星期日

Will The Microsoft/Nokia Marriage Bear Fruit

For most people, it’s not a union made in Heaven. Perhaps more like a shotgun marriage where one has got into trouble and needs help from the other in hopes of delivering a hail Mary market blockbuster.

The worlds largest mobile phone maker is hooking up with the world’s largest software maker to produce a hopefully competitive smartphone for a exploding market now dominated by Apple’s iPhone and Google’s Android based phones. This is a very unusual event being driven by fast paced technological advances and changing customer demand.

The mobile phone market once ruled completely by Nokia is now a whole new game where the smartphone is quickly pushing less techie low margin phones to the sidelines. Nokia still dominates the low end mobile phone market outside of North America but it is a shrinking market and Nokia’s new CEO Stephen Elop has stated the obvious in a blistering internal memo he wrote to Nokia staff.

The memo became public last Thursday and it is very interesting reading in that Nokia’s dirty linen gets scrubbed in public. The jist of it is that Apple and Google have come out of no where and are leaving Nokia far behind with their corporate panties down in the smartphone niche.

The Nokia software platform known as Symbian just can’t cut it against the other two emerging players and something has to be done about it quickly to put the brakes on Nokia’s slide down the techie slope to nowheresville.

Elop, a former Microsoft executive hired by Nokia only a few months ago as their CEO has decided that a Nokia built phone running on the Windows 7 mobile platform is the best short term solution available to stop the downward momentum.

Will it be good enough to work? Will it serve as a stop gap measure to try and buy Nokia a bit of time for Elop to turn the corporate culture around and get a cutting edge Nokia designed software/hardware smartphone package to market?

This is a fast paced market driven by technological change. Steve Jobs has used the iLine of Apple products to turn Apple in a few short years to perhaps one of the worlds largest corporations. He changed that corporate culture from a computer company making a mobile phone to a wireless smartphone company that also still makes computers.

Last week … rumors of Steve Job’s poor health caused a $10 billion sell off flash crash in Apple stock. This is a pretty fickle market where one faux pas can make and/or break your corporate sales momentum.

Blackberry maker RIM has been another company that has lost market share to Apple and Android. They have responded by buying up a software maker that has a good history of building robust operating systems and are adopting their future playbook devices and Blackberry phones to that technology. That’s their way of trying to cope with the smartphone market elephant and to try to stay in the race for lead dog.

In the ebb and flow of fast changing technology, the next new thing may change everything about a market. The smartphone concept was a game changer. How quickly competitors adapt to the new game will determine whether they remain competitive … or just quietly slip away into irrelevance.

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2010年10月29日星期五

Google Nexus Two Rounds Out the Android Smartphone Two Redux




News Analysis: Android users are faced with a string of smart phones with the version number “two” tacked on. Will the Nexus Two be any different?

Today’s round of breathless Android phone excitement comes from rumors that Samsung and Google will announce the Google Nexus Two Android phone on Nov. 8. The rumors are by no means substantiated, although they come from sources, Gizmodo as well as eWEEK’s Clint Boulton, that have been reliable in the past.

But right now there’s considerable disagreement as to whether the Nov. 8 announcement will be for the Nexus Two or for some other phone. The only thing we know for certain is that it’s not for the Verizon Wireless version of the iPhone 4.

The next questions are all fairly obvious. Why a Nexus Two? Why is it from Samsung, which already has a line of highly successful Galaxy S phones? And what’s with all these phones named something-Two, anyway?

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convert avi to android phonesFirst, the Two thing. Tech companies, especially consumer tech companies, like to tack a Two on a product when the original was very successful or otherwise groundbreaking. It makes people remember how cool the previous product was and helps them associate that coolness with the new product. In some cases, such as Verizon Wireless and the Droid 2, it’s a pretty good comparison.

Verizon Wireless has been selling a line of Droids after the success of the initial product, resulting in the Droid Incredible, the Droid X and the Droid 2. Of the three, the Droid 2 was the most obvious descendent of the original. Calling it the Droid 2 made sense.

T-Mobile, meanwhile, has just launched the G2, which is clearly intended to be the next step from the highly successful G1 phone. The G1 was the first Android phone on the market. The G2 resembles its predecessor in many ways, but of course is updated with a much newer version of Android and with support for T-Mobile’s very fast HSPA+ network. Again, the G2 is a very capable phone that’s obviously a descendent of the original, but thoroughly updated.

But what about the Nexus Two? The original was built by HTC and was sold through Google’s Website. It was an unlocked phone that you could get with T-Mobile service, or without any service, and just insert your own SIM card. The idea behind the Nexus was to provide a pure Android platform with a lot of features. The device was aimed at developers. Part of the deal was that Google would ensure that the Nexus was kept up to date, giving developers assurance that they were developing on the latest available platform.

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