Software architect working in Symbian/S60 area since 2000 and still being enthusiastic about mobility. Please visit my introduction page on Forum Nokia Champions web page.
tote_b5 | 20 August, 2008 23:57
In response to the article I found on Forbes.com, Nokia Software Problem,
let me collect my remarks on the statements in a single post. The list
of statements below simply follows the same order as they appeared in
the original article.
"Nokia sells close to half of all smart phones worldwide"
Well, around 70% would be more accurate, but then it couldn't have been said that "close to half".
"N95's only edge was in watching video"
Hmm,
let me smile at it. I think GPS, 5 megapixel camera, WiFi, etc. also
come in handy every now and then. These things were all new in a Nokia
device at the time when N95 was introduced and although Nokia might not
have been the first in introducing them, the point is that video was not the only thing users could enjoy.
"Symbian is not dead, but it has a limited amount of time to act to capture developer mind share before it is too late,"
I don't know how many times I wrote this on various forums: developing for a Symbian-based device does NOT mean pure Symbian/C++ development. On the contrary, the range of possibilities is much wider: you can program in Flash (Lite), Java (Mobile), Python (for S60/UIQ), (Open) C, Widgets, .NET, NS Basic,
etc. My question is not solely addressed to Apple: is there any other
manufacturer in the world who can compete with this at this very
moment? Is it the not-closed-but-not-too-open-either Apple who although
enables Objective-C development, but nothing else? For example, Java,
which is not only available on all other
platforms, but also the primary language for 3d-party development on
Android? Not as if I had heard too many good things on iPhone developer
support, but are they really the ones who will save the world?
"Applications written for the iPhone, by contrast, will run on every iPhone."
Ehh,
typically naive, beginner approach. I wouldn't write an article if I
were such a beginner, though. How many iPhone models can we talk about
at the moment? Two. There's a rumour on Apple introducing iPhone Nano
still this year and I bet that that device would introduce variation
both in hardware (e.g. screen size) and software. And having spent
almost a decade with mobile software development, I can tell you that
software development becomes exponentially more complex with the
introduction of variations. I think we should get back to this question
in 1-2 years time-frame and then we'll see how programs written for old
models will work on new ones and vice versa.
"Carriers here have been loath to give Nokia much love over the years"
Yeah, this one is a hit on the nail. I find it very interesting
how much North-American carriers favour US phone manufacturers (Palm,
Microsoft, Apple) and Canadians (RIM). It is one of the root causes (if
not THE) why Nokia has failed to successfully enter North-American
market.
As to developing software for mobile platforms, it's
worth noting that it's becoming more and more popular to rely on a thin
client software responsible mainly for the User Interface, while
storing data and implementing heavy business logic on a remote server.
So often, the thin client is a browser or an application capable of
providing "browser-like" behavior. This is something iPhone, the latest
Nokia S60 phones, Windows Mobile are (and the newcomer Android will be)
good at. And lots of people say that this architecture is the most
suitable solution for cross-(mobile)platform software.
In my
opinion, it's too early to talk about the dethronement of Nokia by
Apple and RIM. Just count the number of phones sold, how many models
various manufacturers have on market, how long has a manufacturer been
on market, etc. and we'll have just the right amount of information ...
to be silent. The author of the
article fails to see that global market is not equal to American
market, over-emphasizes the importance of Silicon Valley and can't
think of the possibility that these platforms, devices, manufacturers
can co-exist with one another.
Otherwise the article was good,
Tote :)
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tote_b5 | 07 August, 2008 23:21
Having followed the news of mobile industry in the past week, I thought
it would be worth collecting some articles in a single post to see
things from a bird's view, thus having a better overview on what's been
going on lately on smartphone market.
RIM has been getting stronger in US market and Palm is unhappy
with that. Although Palm's popularity had started to fall even before
Apple entered mobile phone market, the new iPhone has just "helped" to
boost the process. As to Apple, new countries have confirmed August launch
enabling iPhone (3G) to gain bigger popularity and increasing its
market share in other countries than US. In addition, the name of iPhone Nano has appeared again
whispering words about the introduction of this device still this year.
Apple is on its way to become stronger and stronger, but they're still
in the "Other" segment of mobile devices according to ABI Research. And if Apple is making tsunami "from the bottom", Nokia is doing the same from the top with their price cut - I wouldn't like to be the stuffing in this sandwich.
It seems that we're living the time of foundations: this time it's LiMo that has picked up 11 new members to become stronger in the fight against Google OHA and Symbian Foundation. With the first LiMo handsets out,
I wonder how they can catch up with industry leader Symbian, the also
very powerful Windows Mobile and the likes. I did not mention Android
deliberately, because to me it still exists only on "paper".
As to the creator of Windows Mobile, it's already well-known that Microsoft's Silverlight will come to S60. What is rumoured now, though, that Zune would also be available on Nokia devices. Zune clearly a competitor to Nokia's Ovi
- will M$ and Nokia ever join their forces to fight against their
newest pretender? I bet Apple will never open MobileMe to non-Mac
device owners.
A new feature has been introduced on Ovi.com, namely file sharing, a fee-based storage option. Files on Ovi is a similar service to MobileMe's iDisk. As to MobileMe,
the transition from .Mac to MobileMe was not as smooth as Apple had
hoped. As Apple CEO, Steve Jobs, said "It was a mistake to launch
MobileMe at the same time as iPhone 3G, iPhone 2.0 software and the App
Store". Well, although lots of people already think that Apple can only
teach things to other players in mobile arena, I stronly believe that
the opposite is also true.
Finally, let me recommend an article that well-deserved the title of post of the week at Carnival of Mobilists. The great post written by Andreas Constantinou from Vision Mobile was definitely a very useful foundation of this article.
Interesting times we're living,
Tote
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