Android


7/26/2010 by mountainviewcellphones.com

Apple has gone bananas. They are now posting “fake” test results for other competitor phones in an effort to show that their phone is as bad as everyone else’s device.  Sure the signal changes but not dramatically and that doesn’t necessarily effect the end result of a dropped call.

PC Magazine tried to recreate Apple’s result and found the Apple tests were overhyped.

 I think this is a serious lack of executive judgment here.  They are covering up their poor engineering decisions with smoke screens.  This one falls all on Steve Jobs and his executive team.  They goofed.  They are trying to avoid an all out recall.  People pay good money for a phone that doesn’t work…it’s a recipe for disaster. 

I’m wondering if these moves indicate in anyway the level of returns for the IPHONE 4.0  (or just the “I” as it’s not really a good “Phone”).  For whatever reason, customers now have an excuse to just give it back without justification and there may be some intense pressure on ATT as well. 

Lastly, this IPhone 4.0 antenna issue may really mess up the launch date of the IPhone 4.0 on Verizon and other carriers.  No internal testing group in Verizon or probably Sprint will allow this mess up to get to their customers without a rework of the device or inclusion of a fix from the point of purchase.

As the video makes clear (from the PC Magazine test) Android’s star just keeps on rising with the free advertising.      

7/24/2010 by mountainviewcellphones.com

Android continues to gain market share in the smartphone space. According to the Google Blog, Android is having about 160,000 activations per day. Apple Iphone sales from their quarterly report were 8.4 million.

8.4 million / 91 days in quarter = 92,308 Iphones per day.

From these two standpoints, it’s clear that the Android is outpacing IPhone 1.7:1. This is very consistent with the information in the comscore reports about market share.

This pace is only going to increase towards the favor of Android with the launch of Droid X, 4G Epic, and other Android versions on all carriers globally (Samsung and LG versions in particular).

Comscore states we have about 49.1 million smartphone users in the USA, 24.4% Apple or 11.98 million. Android had 13% or 6.3 million. Android was gaining market share at a global rate of 67,692 per day. If this was all in the USA, this gap would be closed in about 84 days, or about 3 months. However because we are comparing global figures versus US market shares, we will make a range estimate for the Android overtaking market share and the largest smartphone platform.

The minimum is 3 months (as above). We will assume that 50% of this market share gain is attributable to the USA given the large success of Android here. That would put the date of parity market share in December of 2010.

So starting January 2011, we should have parity of market share for IPhone and Android, each garnering about 25% of the market (assuming Blackberry continues to hold its share).

It’s fun how this timing is planned with the IPhone launch on other carriers rumored in 2011.

7/15/2010 by www.Mountainviewcellphones.com

Apple’s got more major problems but now they are very large strategic problems as well.  Android is eating away at IPHONE, quickly.  We all know about the consumer reports and RF problems with the IPhone, and Apple will probably come out with a fix for it tomorrow, but that is really not the biggest issue (although it’s big). 

The biggest issue is that the world has caught up and is surpassing the IPhone.

1.  IPhone lost smartphone market share in the latest 3 month average by comscore.  Android grew by 4%.   By a sheer feature list comparison, phones are on par or surpassing the IPhone.  Other traditional manufacturers like HTC, Samsung, Motorola, and LG have better camera’s and video capability, faster and faster processing speeds in software and hardware, and definitely faster networking speeds for the devices with Sprint 4G and Verizon LTE coming.  Droid does better.  Android leverages the vast manufacturing expertise of Motorola, Samsung, and LG.  The Empire Strikes back so to speak.  Every carrier has a Droid now and soon every carrier globally.  At this rate, Android will have same market share as Apple by 2011 and will surpass Apple in 2011.     

2.  Technologically, Android phones are now on par and improving at faster rates and address more form factors and niches of the market.  According to Google Blog, there are 160,000 daily activations of Android devices globally.   This is DAILY…and this is GROWING.  Apple’s current theory of one Phone to rule them all is quickly falling apart in the reality that many users prefer different physical form factors and different carriers.  As Apple grapples with this fundamental problem, it may mean lower margins, more R&D, and bigger overhead costs of managing these processes.  Apple will need to come out with more form factors…it happened at RIMM, it will happen at Apple to.  There are low end markets, high end markets, big fingers, long finger nails, rough environments, data hogs, Internet addicts, social networking addicts, super texters, etc…all sorts of people.  Apple can decide they are going to give away the niches to all the other players or they can decide to go after each major one.  If they don’t go and compete in the niches, they will lose even more market share faster and jeopardize their current leadership in the app space (the crown jewel).  If they do go after the niches, this will reduce their economies of scale and profitability and increase the management headache 10.0x to work with many carriers, many form factors, and many different phone engineering projects running concurrently in house.  Damned if you do and damned if you don’t.  This is the game that the traditional cellular manufacturers play well in, look at the form factors available on Samsung, numerous.  They are 1-2 years ahead of Apple in being able to produce many different products and form factors and niche phones profitably.  This plays into the strengths of current phone manufacturers and against Apple.        

3.  Developers love Apple but even here Apple is clamping down.  With moves to not allow developers into the club if they also promote Droid will not slow Droid down.  It is either going to involve illicit deceit or creative legal fees to avoid Apple’s contract for developers, while they produce for both Droid and Apple, or they will just leave Apple altogether and bet it all on Android.  Developers want to develop for the largest platform, and currently Apple is that platform, but it’s losing share fast.  Android has it’s own warts in that manufacturers can modify it to much to not allow one application to run on many different devices, but I think for now manufacturers and smart enough to not kill the golden goose.

4.  The Wild Card.  Android TV.  I think Google is going to get it sooner or later and they probably have already.  Here’s my prognostication, Android will be the platform for all three screens (TV, Browser, and Phone).  Currently at Google there are separate teams for Android and Chrome, but this can change and will probably change.  There is just to much strategic value in being able to link a platform across all various form factors.  An Android developer can build something for phone that works on TV and on the computer.  It’s the ultimate development platform across different “types” of devices as well as many form factors for those devices.  It’s pie in the sky thinking but it’s really not that far away and Google has the resources to make this a reality.  Developers will have to think not just about mobile but the whole shebang and Android will be the most obvious choice.  Apple is attempting a similar strategy with Apple TV and the unique Ipad and will be a contender in this arena as well.  Again…Google is reaching out to partners who can manufacture in myriad ways and to have them adopt Android.  Manufacturers gain by having a great flexible OS at little if any cost and they can gain a competitive advantage for their products (currently). 

It’s an exciting time.  Apple’s got a lot to think about and execute on.  Are they going to remain a niche player and do their own thing? or will they go into more form factors to address niche markets better.

We are now at 44 people and climbing. Busy day today. Many people responding with “Yes.” Let us know if you want to be part of the revolution.   Help us get to 50 and everyone’s got $50 off.  Help us get 56 more and everyone gets $60 off. 

htcevo@guideservices.us

by www.mountainviewcellphones.com  5/19/2010

There are a few cool things that the HTC Evo will do with the HTC Sense overlay.  These are just nice touches.

1.  Polite Ring.  So when you pick up the phone the ring volume automatically reduces

2.  Mulitple people widgets for different contact groups in the phone

3.  View merged contacts from different sources (Google-Facebook-Exchange)

4.  View todays agenda quickly thru a widget

5.  Friend Stream integrates many social networking areas into one feed

6.  Flash Lite….Flash 10 compatibility…yeeehaaa!!!  (sorry, the Texan in me). 

7.  Email filtering tabs…not sure how this works yet

8.  Widescreen, cinematic, weather display widget

These are great new enhancements that HTC provides to improve Android above other Android implementations.

Android, the mobile operating system developed in large part by Google, has leapfrogged Apple’s iPhone OS in terms of U.S. market share.

Android, which is supported by multiple cellular  manufacturers and mobile carriers, has jumped from a 20% market share to a 28 percent market share (which it currently lays stake to) in only a few months time. The implementation of Android through each manufacturer’s product lines has helped Android to gain users, third party developer support, and establish itself as the most exciting smartphone OS to date.

Sprint’s current lineup of Android powered devices, the HTC Hero, Samsung Moment, and upcoming HTC EVO - the nation’s first 4G capable handset - has Sprint poised to offer the most diverse and complete Android offerings to their customers.

5/11/2010 www.mountainviewcellphones.com

In a jumbled up press release between Samsung, Sprint, and Citrix, Sprint announces the Samsung Moment is now a certified Citrix Ready device. 

The Citrix Receiver allows companies using Citrix to get access to enterprise applications from a mobile device.  The XenApp is I guess now Citrix for everything it looks like.  From what I’ve see, this looks fantastic as a way to get your enterprise applications mobilized.  It’s not perfect for searching, execution, and looks very window intensive to execute things, but it’s a real evolution and provides a great ability to get things on the handheld not done before.  I think the best use is for viewing and perhaps basic system functions (like processing an expense report or hours of work etc…). 

Now, you mix 4G Evo with real data speeds, then you can get a better use of your Citrix systems wherever you are at.   

This is a big step forward.  As a milestone of affirmation, Android is now here with Blackberry and IPhone.

5/1/2010 by mountainviewcellphones.com

We are starting a series on how businesses can best use the Android apps and platform for their needs.  We will be looking at several ways to increase productivity, have fun, and use Android to save time, money, and have more fun with your phone.

Look forward to blogging more on this topic for the Month of May.

This blog is the personal opinion of the team members and are not to be taken as anything else other than opinions presented to help the readers. Any opinions expressed here are not of Sprint Nextel corporation and/or Guide Services. The team members, Guide Services, and/or Sprint Nextel are not liable for actions or consequences of the reader's actions due to any content presented in this site. The reader assumes all personal responsibility for actions and consequences the reader takes thru or because of the opinions expressed on this site.