Posts Tagged ‘BlackBerry’
Mobile: Google Voice is to be available on mobile phones with Android or Blackberry handsets
The mobile version is currently only available for Android OS phones or Blackberrys, and you need to already have be one of its invitation-only beta users. That’s expected to change shortly when the service, built around its acquisition of a company called GrandCentral, opens to all.
When that comes, one would also expect an app for Windows Mobile phones and the iPhone. Google Voice comes with a panoply of features that no wireless carrier comes close to matching. Think of being able to program your phone to automatically shunt calls from your landlord to voice mail, but send calls from your spouse immediately to ring to all of your phones.
But really the mobile app is about two things: extending Google’s reach so that more of its users’ lives runs through Google’s all-seeing code where they can be served ads. And secondly, it’s a jab at the wireless carriers, which have long acted as if their subscribers belonged to them, charging entrance fees for outsiders to offer services to them.
Now Google has made a better phone service than any offering you can get from a traditional telecom. That’s an attempt to turn wireless carriers into dumb data pipes, since all a user now needs to get control over their voicemail, messages and phone number is install an application.
Telecoms will hate this product. It will cost them millions to duplicate its basic features, which they will have to do to compete.
Of course, if the phone companies had sat down five years ago and thought about what they could do to make phone service better, rather than more profitable, then companies like Google and Apple wouldn’t be so successful at demolishing their business models.
USA: A satellite was launched to provide service outside terrestrial coverage areas
The satellite, owned by TerreStar Corp. of Reston, Va., blasted off from Kourou in the South American territory of French Guiana shortly before 2 p.m. Eastern time, carried through pink clouds.
Half an hour later, French satellite launcher Arianespace announced that the TerreStar-1 had separated successfully from the rocket, on its way to an orbit 22,000 miles above the Earth.
There, the satellite is designed to unfurl an umbrella-like antenna of gold mesh 60 feet across, so it can pick up and relay signals from phones that are not much larger than regular cell phones.
TerreStar has shown prototypes of the phones, which are similar to BlackBerrys, and like them, would have access to data and e-mail. The phones aren’t on sale yet. TerreStar plans to have the system running before the end of the year.
To connect to the satellite, the handsets will need a clear view of the southern sky, just like a satellite dish. When that’s not available, the sets will be able to connect to regular ground-based cellular networks. TerreStar has a roaming agreement with AT&T Inc.
The TerreStar-1 satellite, built by Loral Space & Communications Ltd., was originally scheduled to launch in 2007, but was delayed several times because of manufacturing problems.
The satellite is due be followed by two similar, even larger ones from a competitor, SkyTerra Communications Inc., next year.
TerreStar and SkyTerra are hoping to avoid the fate that met two pioneers in satellite telephony. Iridium and Globalstar filed for bankruptcy at the beginning of the decade, wiping out billions in investor capital after launching extensive satellite systems. They are still in operation, providing last-resort communications for the military, forest wardens and others who can afford to buy dedicated, bulky satellite handsets for $1,000 and up.
TerreStar shares rose 17 cents, or 11 percent, to $1.70 on Wednesday, though the increase occurred before the launch of the satellite.
South Africa: The cost of calls between networks artificially raises the number of subscriptions
There are now a whopping 50-million cellphone SIM cards being used, implying practically everyone has a handset.
But multiple phone numbers are prevalent among technology and telecoms professionals as they know how much cash interconnection fees suck out of their wallets, adding R1,25 a minute to cross-network calls.
The actual number of individual users is closer to 34-million, according to Arthur Goldstuck, MD of research house World Wide Worx. The basic figure of 50-million active SIM cards “gives the impression that every South African has a cellphone, but that is obviously not possible”, he said.
“It’s become clear that many pre- paid users have a SIM card for each major network to avoid incurring the interconnection fee charged for calls between networks. The low cost of new SIM cards — as little as 50c for a starter pack — also gives anyone the ability to have more than one number.”
Research by World Wide Worx was conducted for its 2009 annual Mobility study, sponsored by First National Bank (FNB) and Research in Motion (RIM), the group behind the BlackBerry.
One aim was to highlight investment opportunities in mobile technologies by finding out what people were using, said Len Pienaar, CEO of FNB’s mobile and transactional solutions. Cellphones had become the most easily accessible way of offering services to remote areas, and an understanding of cellphone usage and trends was necessary to introduce technologies effectively, he said.
A more in-depth understanding of consumer perceptions and trends was critical so their needs could be met.
The findings confirmed that SA’s cellular market still enjoyed robust growth despite high penetration, said RIM regional director Deon Liebenberg. “It is not only the number of cellular connections that is growing, but also the applications for which subscribers are using their smartphones.”
South Korea – opening the market for handsets
Adopting Wireless Internet Platform for Interoperability, which has prevented many foreign cellphone makers from selling their products in the Korean market, will no longer be mandatory, starting April 2009. As a result, global bestsellers, such as Apple’s iPhone of the U.S. and RIM’s BlackBerry of Canada, and Nokia’s budget phones of Finland, will likely hit the Korean market.
WIPI is a Korean mobile device platform for wireless internet content, including games. To advance into the Korean market, foreign cellphone makers are required to support WIPI, whose standard is different from international platforms, in their handsets. They have criticized the requirement, citing the small size of the Korean market and high development costs.
In a session on Wednesday, the Korea Communications Commission decided to lift the requirement, while saying it will no longer be mandatory for domestic mobile phone service providers to adopt WIPI from April 2009.
Since April 2005, the government has made it mandatory to include WIPI, which was set by the Telecommunications Technology Association. The commission said, “When the WIPI requirement was first set, the government intended to protect and foster the domestic software industry related to wireless internet by using WIPI. But the latest global market trend is a universal mobile operating system, focusing on smartphones.”
The mobile industry predicts that foreign products will hit the domestic market, which is led by Samsung Electronics and LG Electronics, in earnest next spring.
Nokia: Running in molasses
That thought came to me several times during a briefing day that Nokia and the new Symbian Foundation held recently in San Francisco. A recurring theme was a deeply earnest discussion of how big and complex their business is, and how proud they are that despite the complexity they can make forward progress. For example:
Charles Davies, CTO of the new foundation, pointed out to us that Symbian OS has about 450,000 source files. That’s right, half a million files. They’re organized into 85 “packages,” all of which have been charted out in a diagram that will be posted soon on the foundation’s website. Davies was proud that the diagram is in SVG format, so you can zoom in on it and see that “this is an architecture that’s not just a plateful of spaghetti.”
The diagram looks a bit like a plateful of very colorful spaghetti (although in fairness to Charles, that’s true of every OS architecture diagram I’ve ever seen). Anyway, the big takeaway was how huge the OS is.
Davies talked about the substantial challenges involved in open sourcing a code base that large. He said it will take up to another two years before all of the code is released under the Eclipse license. In the meantime, a majority of the code on launch day of the foundation will be in a more restrictive license that requires registration and a payment of $1,500 for access. There’s also a small amount of third party copyrighted code within Symbian, and the foundation is trying to either get the rights to that code, or figure a way to make it available in binary format.
Those are all typical problems when a project is moving to open source, and the upshot of them is that Symbian won’t be able to get the full benefits of its move to open source until quite a while after the foundation is launched. What slows the process down is the amount of code that Symbian and Nokia have to move. I believe that Symbian OS is probably the largest software project ever taken from closed to open source. If you’ve ever dealt with moving code to open source, you’ll know how staggeringly complex the legal reviews are. What Nokia and Symbian are doing is heroic, scary, and incredibly tedious. It’s like, well, running in molasses.
Lee Williams, Nokia’s software platform SVP who is moving over to become head of the Symbian foundation, picked up on the theme of massiveness. He said the OS is on 200 million devices, with 200 device types shipped and another 100 in development. With support for five different baseband modems, seven different processor architectures, symmetric multiprocessing, and a broad set of displays, “your options are dramatic and huge.”
This sort of infrastructure is needed, he said, because IT, telecom, and the Internet “have merged almost completely…. It’s the perfect storm of convergence. There’s almost nothing it can’t eat or it won’t use.” He compared its importance to the creation of movable type, color palettes, and the Renaissance.
He noted that some people think the Symbian Foundation is a response to Android and other competitive moves, but said the company can’t move that fast, and actually the change was in the works long before Google announced its software.
At dinner, I had a chance to chat with one of the Nokia managers. He was kind enough to let me play around with a pre-release N97 (more on that below), and the discussion gravitated to the iPhone. He told me how excited he is by the many new products Nokia has in the labs but can’t talk about yet, and expressed some frustration that people don’t understand why it takes time for Nokia to respond to changes in the market. He described Nokia as a giant ship. “It takes a long time to turn it, but when we do…” he said ominously, and then reminded me that Netscape once had a lead over Microsoft before it was crushed.
The problem with talking to the folks from Nokia is that you’re never sure what they believe vs. what’s the official story they’re trying to put out in the market. They’re disciplined enough that they can stay on message quite well, and in most conversations they focus on talking about what they’re doing rather than asking for feedback or getting into a two-way conversation.
So I’ll assume that Nokia was being serious. In that case, let’s look at some financials from 1997 (Netscape vs. Microsoft) and 2007 (Apple vs. Nokia):

All figures in millions of dollars.
Don’t worry too much about revenue and net income; those are usually tied up by the ongoing operations of each company. The line I want you to focus on is cash. That is your ammunition — the extra resource available to fund a big marketing campaign, or a new product development program, or an acquisition of an innovative new technology. Microsoft had 46 times more cash than Netscape in 1997, and it wasn’t seriously threatened in any of its other core businesses. It could, and did, spend Netscape into the ground.
Apple has about the same cash hoard as Nokia. Much more importantly, Apple can focus that cash on a narrower battlefront. Its situation relative to Windows is relatively safe. Although Microsoft can never be ignored, it is innovating so slowly that Apple can take some profit from its PC business to fund other things. The music player business is also stable; although it’s not growing like it used to, no one has come close to matching the integration of the iPod and iTunes. So Apple is free to spend huge wads of cash to establish its new iPhone business. It can pick the countries and vertical usages it wants to dominate, and as long as it doesn’t do too many things at once, it can outspend almost any competitor.
Nokia, on the other hand, has battlefields everywhere:
–In mobile phones it’s fighting Samsung, LG, and SonyEricsson, and a badly wounded (therefore desperate) Motorola.
–In entertainment smartphones it’s fighting Apple.
–In communicators it’s fighting RIM.
–In OS it’s fighting Google, Microsoft, etc.
–In online services it’s fighting Google, Yahoo, Microsoft, etc.
As Nokia EVP Anssi Vanjoki put it recently (link):
There?s a company that says they can index the world; we are going to go deeper – we are going to coordinate the world.
Sweet! He calls out Google and says he’ll beat them in their core business. It’s a noble effort. I love the company’s ambition. But does Nokia have the resources to fight all those battles at once?
If the folks at Nokia really think they are well positioned to crush Apple, they need to go re-read The Innovator’s Dilemma. Being big is not a benefit in a rapidly-changing market with emerging segments. A big company can’t respond nimbly to that sort of change, and the segments attacked by new entrants are usually too small to justify huge investment by an incumbent. So new challengers like Apple and RIM pop up all around you, you gradually shed little chunks of market share, and you complain that people don’t understand how powerful your core business is.
I am not at all saying that Nokia is doomed. They are an outstanding company, with smart people, a great brand, and enormous strengths. But they need to understand that turning the battleship a little faster won’t win the war. Nokia’s smartphone competitors are not standing in molasses; they won’t stay still long enough for the 16-inch guns to be pointed at them. More importantly, the competitors on the services side breed like vampire rabbits. By the time you blow away a clutch of them, three dozen more have hatched and are sucking blood from the other side of the ship.
To succeed in smartphones, I think Nokia needs to start creating the sort of integrated software + hardware solutions that the smartphone winners excel at. And on the services side, it needs to start breeding its own killer rabbits (small entrepreneurial experiments that move fast and die quickly if they fail). So far what I think I see looks like a more design-savvy version of the smartphone business of Samsung (throw hardware at the wall and see what sticks) coupled with an effort to create a 16-inch cannon of services.
That’s probably not enough to win in the long run. Nokia still has a lot of time to get it right. But do they really understand what needs to change? I can’t tell, because all I usually get from them is monologues on how big their business is and how much cool stuff they have in the lab.
=====
A few other tidbits from the day…
N97: Second cousin twice removed of the Revo. I got a chance to play with a pre-release N97, Nokia’s upcoming qwerty phone. The screen slides sideways to reveal a little keyboard underneath.
The look and size of the device reminded me a little bit of the old Psion Revo, although it’s a pretty distant echo. The sliding process of the screen has a very nice feel to it; it’s the sort of physical detail that Nokia excels at. Even in a pre-release state, the phone felt nice and solid in my hand.
The software needs a lot more work, but they admitted that. It’s a pre-release device. No worries at this point.
As for the keyboard, I thought it was mediocre. The keys, and especially the microscopic letters on them, are a little too small for my taste (I have big thumbs). Typing was slower than I expect on a thumb keyboard. I’d put it about on a par with the Blackberry Storm (that’s the Blackberry with the on-screen keyboard). The Storm has bigger letters than the N97, and unlike David Pogue I like the tactile feedback when you tap on its screen, although it is not as good as a real keyboard.
So the N97 has real keys but they’re too tiny, and the Storm has bigger keys but they’re not real. The tiebreaker is the software — the Storm is notoriously unstable (it took me about 40 seconds to crash it). I think neither product is ready for the market yet. Unfortunately for RIM, the Storm is already shipping.
The destiny of Trolltech. About a year ago, when Nokia purchased Trolltech, I wondered what they were going to do with it (link). Now we know — Trolltech’s Qt software layer is going to become a graphics layer for Symbian. No word on what happens to Trolltech’s other products.
That’s nice, but what’s it good for? Symbian is adding symmetric multiprocessing to the OS. In a session discussing the change, a member of the audience asked what you’d use symmetric multiprocessing for on a mobile device.
Long pause. “Well, some games use it…” Another long pause.
This is the difficulty of taking a technology-only approach when talking to developers. Although software developers are technophiles, what they really care about is what sort of cool products you can enable them to build. If your feature doesn’t let them do something cool, they won’t care about it.
(By the way, according to an article here, the benefit will be in performance tuning and battery life — critical to handset vendors, but sanitation issues to application developers.)
Some alternate opinions. Some other people briefed by Nokia are not as worried as me about the molasses thing. In the interest of balance, here are a few examples:
Commentary from SymbianOne (link).
Fabrizio over at Funambol (link).
SonyEricsson on the event (link).Copyright 2008 Michael Mace.

