Ten years ago the cellphone industry was as teeming with life as a
coral reef. Weird, multi-colored Nokias and Samsungs flitted between
fronds of seagrass while Sidekicks scuttled in and out of tiny sea
caves. Blackberries lumbered through the coral like lions on the hunt,
eviscerating all “serious” comers with better software. Apple had
released a deeply embarrassing clownfish of a phone in a Motorola joint venture.
Rap stars and fanboys paid thousands to get the latest cellphones and
there was a website, Bengal Boy, dedicated to showing both bikini-clad
women and Motorola PEBLs. It was a strange riotous ecosystem where you
could upgrade your phone every few months and never run out of choices.
Now that coral reef is bleached bone white and space gray. There is
one kind of phone, the black slab, and two manufacturers. A decade ago
phones slipped, slid, and transformed. Now they just slide to unlock.
What would have happened had Cupertino not launched the iPhone
when they did? I think Blackberry and Palm would still be alive, their
OSes and software churning away on countless phones. The rise of the
truly open cellphone – what Android was supposed to be but isn’t – would
have created an entirely new ecosystem for cellphone apps and
home-brew. We’d have Linux on mobile more than we do now.
Carriers would be more important. They would be able to make deals
and sell exclusive and unusual phones. Apple stopped all that in an
instant by making AT&T the hottest carrier in the world for a few
months. Now a carrier’s sales are defined by Apple’s sales cycle, not
the market’s. The latest Android phone from Google makes a solid thump
on any carrier that picks it up but the iPhone can make a quarter or a
year.
We’d also have some aesthetic differences in phones, at least more
than we have now. While the small differences between cellphones are
apparent to the aficionado most people either own an “Android” or an
iPhone. A decade ago you could choose between multiple “stacks,” mostly
written in Java, with very few real apps available for download with no
real way to pay for them. Phones existed as self-contained microclimates
designed for a few simple purposes. Doing business? Get a Blackberry.
Feeling fancy? Get an LG Chocolate. Messaging a lot? Motorola Q was your
style.
Apple and Samsung entered into a massive battle in about 2010. At
this point most of the variations had died out and the Galaxy line
competed with the iPhones on a feature-for-feature basis. GPS, retina
displays, and great cameras appeared one after the other on phones from
each manufacturer while once-great giants – HTC, LG, Sony Ericsson,
Nokia – watched. The dream of an open Android quickly died under this
pressure resulting in only two locked OSes and a few outliers. At this
point it would be literally impossible to sell an alternative, open or
not. Just ask Microsoft and RIM.
A world without iPhone would be interesting. Those once-mighty giants
would still be running from the “three phones every six months”
playbook releasing any number of specially defined handsets for their
low, middle, and high-end segments. Palm would have continued to develop
its surprisingly good PalmOS and would probably still be a powerhouse.
Smaller manufacturers like HTC would be much bigger and Nokia would
definitely be churning out phones that could double as paving stones.
The iPhone took away our choices. It took away software freedom and
it defined a market full of ad-supported games and one-size-fits-all
design. It made everything a me-too.
But it also led the way for a la carte music sales, streaming,
detailed mapping, photo sharing, and aesthetics. It helped us get from
the early plastic age into a world of better and more recyclable
materials. It moved us away from a riot of color to uniformity and it
made manufacturers work harder on the little things instead of shipping
and forgetting. It gave us Google, Twitter, and Facebook and propelled
Uber into the stratosphere. It build countless millionaires who used its
platform to build and sell great apps.
We lost a lot in the past decade. We lost fun. We lost fashion. We
lost the entrepreneurial streak that once buoyed cellphone
manufacturers. All that is gone, replaced by a cut-throat world of
shipping the latest and the greatest to a public that is used to getting
the best. There is still room for the unusual and the new in the world
of cellphones but it usually trickles up from the low-end markets where
there is still impetus for differentiation. Up in the rarified world of
$500 handsets you basically get a black slab of glass whether you want
it or not.
There has been a lot of talk about the future of mobile and I think
it’s definitely about to change. Phones will become less interesting
when we can talk to and see our interfaces using aural and AR. AI,
however primitive, will kill our contact books and calendar apps. App
stores will shrink and then explode as developers learn to use new
techniques. Our phones will get thinner thanks to new battery systems
and cloud computing will let us do more with less. In short, things are
about to change as much as they did in 2007.
Here’s hoping the iPhone can keep up.
COMMENT AND SHARE.....................!!!!!!!!!!!
Share And Comment Bellow On What You Think About This Post!!!
Comments
Post a Comment
Welcome.......
What are you thinking of....!!