If the next version of the OS doesn't offer lock screen customization and widgets, I won't be renewing my bid in the iOS platform. My 3GS is my first and will be my last if Apple persists with their outdated UI.
We'll see how things go when Verizon is opened up for iPhones next year, but what I expect to see happen is the cell phone market split up among several giants. It's too big a market to be dominated by any one company. It will always have several giants in market share.
So five years from now I expect we will see a big chunk of Android users, and a big chunk of iOS users, and a smaller chunk of Symbian and Blackberry users, and a smattering of others including Microsoft.
No company will ever, ever, ever get 90+% of the phone market the way Windows dominated the personal computer market. So forget those Mac vs PC comparisons people are obsessed with resurrecting every time Apple does something. The phone market is different, it's too big, it's too global for Android to take 90% of it, or for Apple to take 90% of it, or for anyone to take 90% of it. It simply will not happen.
The key is to have a big enough chunk to have developer interest. Apple has that right now. Android has a smaller interest (not as profitable as Apple's at the moment). Both will be fine. Ignore the doomsayers. Apple is in a great position and it's growing. So is Android's position. Both will be fine.
It would also be disingenuous to claim that the way the PC marketplace turned out for so long was of ultimate benefit to consumers. Every time we receive spam in our inboxes or have to deal in some way with a malware-infected Windows PC, or bemoan the fact people were (and still are) quite okay with using a stagnated 9-year-old version of an operating system, we're paying for having sustained that model for so long.
This assumes a myopic, monopolistic, "there-can-be-only-one" viewpoint. Everyone comes to the assuption that there must be only one dominant platform at the expense of all others.
If you want to keep your head in the sand and believe that lack of choice is best, then also by all means, knock yourself out.
Well, there is a reason he no longer is at Apple.....
I believe that if Steve Jobs had focused on staying on track and not rushed iPhone 4 to market in order to get in front of the Android wave of releases, we would not have experienced Antennagate. That debacle is not how Apple normally operates, but Steve got nervous, reacted, and shipped the phone too soon. It was not fully tested & ready.
Steve's a brilliant guy, and Apple is well known for having great inside knowledge about their competitors. Once he learned about the soon to launch Android wave, spearheaded by Verizons total backing of Motorola's family of Droid's, his ego was threatened, he freaked, and the rest is history.
If you want to keep your head in the sand and believe that lack of choice is best, then also by all means, knock yourself out.
Listen up Tallest Skil, no one is saying choice is bad. What people are saying is that a very large percentage of users don't care about it with regard to diddling with their phones. If they did, the iPhone wouldn't have as big a share of the market.
perhaps you're not aware, there are countries where iphone is sold by multiple carriers.When the iPhone is carried on as many carriers as Android, then we'll talk.
You speak the truth friend. look at where they are today.Steve Jobs would still be living in his parents basement if not for Woz. Jobs is nothing more than a BSing salesman, Woz was the talent.
When the iPhone is carried on as many carriers as Android, then we'll talk.
Of course it's more of an issue for Android than iOS. For the reasons that you outlined in your first few posts in this thread. More choice in hardware and more choice in software configurations. Does it have a keyboard? Landscape or portrait? How many hardware buttons? Resolution? Compass? Wifi? GPS? Other sensors? You get the idea. Yes - you have to ask some of the same questions with the 3 different supported models of the iPhone. But the questions are more limited and the answers are much more clear cut.
And then you have much more potential for Android software fragmentation in the future. Some Android hardware sellers will want to differentiate more through software as hardware becomes a commodity.
Yes, the iPhone has fragmentation issues.
When the iPhone is carried on as many carriers as Android, then we'll talk.
Here's what I'm sure is an unpopular position to take but who the hell cares what Woz says? He isn't relevant and hasn't been in 2 decades now.
You do know that the OS handles most of the things.
The App devs should not be having an issue with different resolution. That is the OS job to handle it. if they are then they are doing it wrong. The OS has the API and tools to handle all that mess no reason to hard code it in and deal with it.
There is not an issue for stuff that runs on our laptops with god knows how many different possible resolution screens or hardware configuration it all works just fine. Most of the stuff is handled by the OS and the programs do dont have to address everything else.
Flood the market with enough "good enough" knock-offs in all sorts of form factors - ranging from the decent to the truly horrible, at all different price points, and spread them around to all carriers, and you'll push enough sheer volume to gain share. Google will whore their slipshod OS out to anyone that can make a box.
This is supposed to be impressive?
A phone that achieves what the iPhone does, while locked to a single carrier in the US, to which all other phones of its kind are compared (and usually fail) . . . now THAT is impressive. An upcoming Verizon partnership will change the game again, of course.
Google is playing the commodity-game. That's all. As for the User Experience that results from this strategy, it'll be hit-and-miss at best, like it is now.
Google never could produce an iPhone-Killer, which they tried to do on several occasions. Most notably they failed with their then-designated flagship phone, the Nexus One. That was to be their own signature product. It tanked. Eric T. Mole and co. figured that no matter how good Eric's Apple crib notes were, the company didn't have the culture and couldn't utilize the available talent as well as Apple could. In other words, Google lacked the tools and the know-how to pull off game-changing, daring moves in this end of the industry. So they implemented the commodification strategy full-tilt. Pull a Nokia but implement the kind of tech and UI Apple was doing. "Good enough" will be just that: good enough. This is the mantra of the tech-whore. License to everyone and push volume.
Wirelessly posted (Mozilla/5.0 (iPhone; U; CPU iPhone OS 4_1 like Mac OS X; en-us) AppleWebKit/532.9 (KHTML, like Gecko) Mobile/8B117)
What about WP7? Not sure. Looks like MS will be playing the licensing-whore game with Google, but Google already at MS' lunch in that department. And we already have the Premium handset maker, Apple. That kinda leaves MS with sloppy seconds - or in this case, thirds.
Correlation does not imply causation. I have an iPhone despite it not being customizable. I didn't choose it because it lacked it and I would have preferred getting a customizable phone.
And again, listen up LTD (why are you calling me Tallest Skil ?), that very same large percentage of users you're dragging into this like customizing their phones, as is evidenced by all the wallpaper threads, and all the different cases in different shapes/sizes/colors. Give them extra widgets to customize and I bet you'll see even more people "diddling" with their phones.
Just put him on your ignore list, I think many of us have already done that, hence the lack of responses to his inane babble.And again, listen up LTD (why are you calling me Tallest Skil ?), that very same large percentage of users you're dragging into this like customizing their phones, as is evidenced by all the wallpaper threads, and all the different cases in different shapes/sizes/colors. Give them extra widgets to customize and I bet you'll see even more people "diddling" with their phones.