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Apple's grandiose plans for the iPhone

Posted Jul 10 2008, 09:27 AM by Douglas McIntyre
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Steve Jobs sees that smartphones -- especially the Apple iPhone -- are the future of computing.  Who needs a PC when a handset will do?

To get to Jobs' goals, Apple "will open its App Store, an online bazaar that will attempt to do for mobile applications like games, reference guides and other software what Apple's iTunes Store has done for music," according to The Wall Street Journal. Jobs calls his new phone a "computing platform."

Apple may have gone a bridge too far. The obvious reason is that companies which have much wider handset and mobile software distribution than Apple can ever hope to have will continue to push their agendas. Even if Jobs can sell 20 million iPhones a year, Nokia sells over 400 million and it is pushing rapidly into the software and content businesses. Nokia controls its own open system, Symbian, which is the most widely used mobile software platform in the world.

Chasing Nokia are relatively formidable companies including Microsoft and Google. None of these companies wants to be stuck on the PC if handsets become the next computers.

The trouble for all of them, and for the Apple initiative in particular, is that mobile devices will never be the next PCs. Wall Street only has to look at the current versions of the insanely popular Mac. With each generation it gets more computing power, more memory, and more storage. Monitors tethered to the Mac are now the size of wide-screen TVs. Consumers want bigger screens for gaming, movies, and business applications.

The PC is "always on." In other words, it is forever connected to the Internet. Take a handset outside its cellular service area and its is no better than a brick with a keyboard.

The mobile device will be useful for e-mail, music, modest Web access and phone calls. It will never match the power or utility of the PC. 3G and WiMax PC connectivity will make the computer's case even stronger. Google is finding that out with its Android mobile platform. Microsoft has never had more than modest success in the wireless world.

Now Apple can find out that the iPhone isn't a Mac or a PC of any sort.

Top Stocks blogger Douglas A. McIntyre is an editor at 24/7 Wall St.

Comments

 

I patently disagree.  The author writes about the iPhone as if it is a finished product.  Wait a couple or three years, Mr. McIntyre.  You will see that Apple's iPhone will have functionality that goes far beyond the best of what Nokia, et al will have to offer.  The other mobile phone companies were scrambling adly when the iPhone was first released.  They wil be in a state of panic in three years.

The idea that the Apple is making iPhone a "computing platform" will open-up the platform to various developers who would like to develop small applications to meet every demand on a handset. Two more years we would see iPhone making its way into everything a handheld device can do.

Symbian is beyond frustating. X nokia communicator user. I enjoy my iPhone immensely. However, its ridiculous there's no support for mms texting

Yer fulla crap, McIntaggart

It's easy to envision a bluetooth/wireless USB/wired 'docking station' for the iphone that adds things like extra storage, better display, etc.  If the cost model was right, it could replace 'primary computer' laptops for many people.

I think the author is underestimating Apple, their history and innovative vision are proven. Each generation of the phone will improve and for many it may replace a desktop or you will be able to connect it to a large display screen if needed.

I think that it is all over rated there are lots of smart phones on the market, among others Nokia has a few on the 3G network for years  and they can do all the things that the iphone can not do, they did not make much noise about it , so what is so special about iphone except for a publicity stunt for a phone which can not even connect to the network or send MMS.  

Unfortunately, the idea is still waiting on a couple technologies to shrink. Why couldn't you cradle the device, or wirelessly input commands and output video and other fun things. Is there a future in a mini mobile computer? Uh huh. The iphone is a start, and Apple has created some very clever and very ergonomic ways to input commands. Voice would still be better. But, I mean, who wants to carry their computers around if they can rdp to them 200 miles away at high speed, and wirelessly transmit that to some local display or the use one in your pocket. What's severely lacking in these devices is a better way to input text and commands. Voice, voice, voice.

For several years now a Windows Mobile phone has been a computer platform and able to do just about anything an iPhone can do today finally and then some.

Apple is going to rule the world.  Just face it.

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