Showing posts with label iPhone 3G. Show all posts
Showing posts with label iPhone 3G. Show all posts

Thursday, July 23, 2009

Can Dell Dethrone the iPhone?

When the subject of a rumored Dell cell phone came up at the company’s financial analyst meeting this week, Dell indicated there was one coming, but gave few details on it. So far, all we know for sure is that it will be based on LTE, or 4G network technologies, putting the timing for the device in 2011 for appreciable volume (though it is at least possible we could see it in late 2010). I figured it might be fun to chat about what Dell needed it to be, if it was going to beat the iPhone. Given that Dell’s Digital Jukebox got its butt kicked by the iPod, I’m thinking the company is looking for a rematch, and could do it right this time.

But what would “do it right” mean, and how do you beat the iPhone?


Palm PrePalm and Blackberry Show the Way

Both the Palm Pre and Blackberry line of phones have grown market share during times when the iPhone has been doing well, by focusing either on things the iPhone did poorly, or a large customer base that the iPhone doesn’t target very well.

The Palm Pre is very similar to the iPhone, improving on the iPhone’s user interface, adding a keyboard, and a removable battery to stand out favorably against the competition. RIM continued its focus on with Blackberry phones, and I know a lot of people who use a Blackberry for work, and an iPhone as their personal phone as a result.

This suggests that the ideal product might be one that businesses would embrace, while still being attractive for non-business use: a combination between the Palm Pre and Blackberry experience.


Owning the Customer

One other thing that the iPhone, Blackberry, and Palm Pre have in common is that all their vendors tend to own and assure the customer experience. They also demand generation (marketing) for their respective phones, and Palm is actually doing a rather impressive job promoting their phone at the moment. I think they would be doing vastly better if they sold through multiple carriers, like Blackberry does, as opposed to just through Sprint. Sprint, unfortunately, is still the least-liked vendor in the U.S., and that has to hurt the Pre’s potential until Palm moves to additional carriers next year.

Android based phoneOne of the reasons I think that Android and Microsoft phones don’t seem to be doing as well at the moment is that with those phones’ customer ownership isn’t clear. You have one company doing the hardware, another providing the network services, and then a third providing the software user experience. None of these players generally seem willing to market at Apple, Blackberry, or Palm levels, nor actually assure that the total experience is market leading.

Dell certainly can own the customer. They typically do a better job of this in the PC market than any other vendor, because most of their products, unlike competitors’, are sold directly from the company. But cell phone service providers tend to complicate things, and it isn’t clear if Dell can, or even wants to, step up and play this game like Apple, Palm, and RIM do.


Leveraging PCs

Palm traditionally does the best job working with PCs. For instance, more of its products can typically be tethered to a PC and work like a modem than competitors. Blackberry was slow to the 3G game due to battery life concerns, making tethering a lower priority for it, and AT&T has prevented Apple from offering tethering. Even though this is changing soon, it takes us right back to owning the customer, and points out that even Apple doesn’t own its customers exclusively.

But for Dell to have an advantage, it has to come at this market from its core strength, which is PC sales. If Dell’s device makes a compelling PC accessory and connects solidly back to the Dell line of laptop products, the synergy could give it an advantage over others. However, Apple did already take a big step in this direction with MobileMe.


NVIDIA Tegra 600 SeriesMy Dream Phone

While I doubt this is the way they will go, were it me, I’d do an Alienware phone. Base it on Nvidia’s Tegra platform, give it an organic Alien-style gloss and metal finish, and blow the windows out in performance. Regardless of the OS, (likely Android or Windows Mobile 7) I’d make sure it had a unique Alienware feel to it and wrap it with a set of accessories that were as wild as the phone was. They could do this, and that’s one phone I’d lust after. Maybe it would look a little like this, but with more of an alien edge.


Wrapping Up

The old Dell DJ got its butt whipped by the Apple iPod, largely because Dell was unwilling to do what it took to beat the competition. That included better industrial design, owning the user experience, and powerful marketing. Its second run at Apple is coming. If Dell learned from its first failure, we should see a very interesting product, but likely not much before 2011 when LTE, or 4G, becomes more prevalent. Until then, we will have to imagine what a Dell phone might look like, and whether it will repeat the failure of the DJ, or learn from Palm and Blackberry to pull an upset. We’ll see.


Source: Digital Trends

Friday, June 26, 2009

HTC Hero's Teflon Coating Makes the iPhone Feel Like Junk



The new HTC Hero next to iPhone. Not only the new Android handset has a surprisingly cool design—straight out of JJ Abrams' Star Trek or Kubrick's 2001—but it kicks the iPhone's plastic ass.

Simply put, the Teflon-coated back just feels and looks a lot better than the iPhone's—now crappy looking, I admit—plastic back. The Hero's polytetrafluoroethylene—the technical name for DuPont's Teflon—coating feels perfect in your hand. It doesn't appear to get any skin oil at all. No greasy fingerprints, just a perfect matte finish no matter how much I touched it.

It feels and looks like a white thermal tile out of NASA's shuttle.

The iPhone's plastic finish, on the other side, is a fingerprint magnet that looks as cheap as any Chinese knockoff after holding it for a few seconds. The Hero wins hands down on appearance, even while its front is too complicated for my taste. For a company like Apple—which takes such pride in their design and manufacturing—this is bad. For a consumer like me, this sucks.

"They are getting so boring"

Once upon a time Apple used to be innovators in the use of new materials. Those were the times in which they experimented with the iMacs and PowerMacs, which finished with the arrival of aluminum. Today, apart from the unibody manufacturing—which is just a form of aluminum manufacturing, a material that has been used forever in consumer products—their use of groundbreaking materials has stagnated.

I'm not the only one saying this. About a month ago Matt Buchanan and I asked the top executive of one of the most important industrial design firms in the world about his thoughts on Apple's design. After seing Objectified—and watching a legend like Dieter Rams glorifying Apple as the only consumer electronics company that counts when it comes to industrial design—I was expecting an ode to Jon Ive and his team. Instead, he replied:

They are great, but we [him and his colleagues in the industrial design world] think they are getting so boring. I mean, don't get me wrong, they got the use of aluminum perfected now... but what happened with the excitement that they used to generate with new materials? We all expect a lot more from Apple.

He is right. Their use of plastics in the iMac spread to every single consumer appliance out there. And Kara Johnson, materials expert from IDEO believes it'll be going out of style any day now (Maybe yesterday.) But now, even aluminum is the new beige. (Even if some experts believe there are few alternatives, there are a few.)

So yes, Apple should use new materials. Not for the sake of it, of course. They should use whatever materials fit the product technical needs. And for me, one of these needs as a consumer is that the product should look great at all times, and not just look great in the box or behind a store glass.

The need for new materials

The iPhone has this problem. It looks like crap with little use. They have tried to fix part of it with the oleophobic coating on the front glass—something that the HTC Hero also has—but the overall effect keeps being the same: Its back still looks cheap after some time.

One thing to note

For this reason we were all hoping for a matte back in the iPhone 3GS, but apparently Apple decided not to release it for one reason or the other.

I don't know and I don't care. What I do care about is that, after playing with the Hero, my iPhone now feels like cheap crap. And I don't even like Android.

Read More Gizmodo

More iPhone Killers? Yawn.

Deutsche Telekom's (NYSE: DT) T-Mobile wants another run at Apple's (Nasdaq: AAPL) iPhone. This time Motorola (NYSE: MOT) wants to join the robot party, too. Good luck with that.

I don't mean to be snarky. Well, OK, yes, I do. Android hasn't dampened enthusiasm for rival smartphones. Research In Motion (Nasdaq: RIMM) gobbled more smartphone market share than Apple did last quarter, and Palm (Nasdaq: PALM) set a new opening weekend sales record for Sprint Nextel (NYSE: S) handsets.

Yet just when it seems as though the iPhone is vulnerable, Apple sells 1 million 3Gs handsets during its first weekend on sale.

Can you hear me now?
T-Mobile plans on releasing at least two Android handsets this year. The first, called myTouch, is a fully functional handset designed by Taiwan's HTC and is expected to hit stores in August. Like the iPhone, the myTouch will come with a touchscreen keyboard but stand apart from its rival with a wide array of customization features. For example, users will be able to rearrange menus, wallpapers, and icons, Computerworld reports.

We know less about Motorola's entry. One possible advantage: tie-ups with both T-Mobile and Verizon's (NYSE: VZ) wireless group, which is also pursuing the Pre. The Wall Street Journal on Tuesday reported that Motorola plans to have an Android handset ready for both networks before the end of the year.

Neither offering looks like an iPhone killer. That's no slight; it's just that RIM has tried and failed. So have others. Palm's Pre is as close to a breakthrough device as we've seen since the iPhone launched, and still consumers and businesses are buying the new iPhone.

Maybe there is no killing the iPhone. Maybe it really is the Next Big Thing. And maybe the truth is that, for as much hype as there is surrounding Android as a smartphone operating system, its best hope is as a netbook OS.

What's your take? Use the comments box below to tell us what you think.

Ream More www.fool.com

Monday, June 8, 2009

iMac and iPhone Design Language consistency

Apple has been good in designing their products with utmost care and details. I noticed from the video of the iPhone 3GS and comparing it with the advertisement of iMac G5 years ago, the consistency of design language and elements across their product lines are always present. You just need to look at it closely.

When Apple released the iMac G5, it was really based on the design language of iPod with a dock. The colors are all white. Even the angle of the screen and the ipod dock is the same.




And they did it again with their iPhone 3G or iPhone 3GS, it was really based on their current iMac design elements like the glossy LCD and black rear cover. Thanks on this video angle, I was able to connect such consistency of their industrial design.




[ image via engadget ]

Sunday, June 7, 2009

WWDC 2009 predictions from John Gruber



1. iPhone 3GS
This will be the codenamed of the new iPhone, with significantly faster processors, twice the RAM, and twice the storage. Prices to remains to remain the same as the current lineup: $199/299 for 16/32 GB, respectively. The video camera is going to be a major selling point. Battery will be improved by 11-15 percent from the current iPhone 3G.

2. Lower prices for iPhone
Apple is also set to annouce a lower priced iPhones citing form Financial times.
The line-up will not replace the 3G but it will be on the 2nd spot, and the 3GS will position itself as the flagship. The entry level iPhones will start at $99, this might be like ipod mini design or something else.

3. iPhone Tethering
With the new iPhone OS 3.0, connecting to the internet with our computer will now be possible.

4. Snow Leaopard
The next major version of the world's most advanced operating system, Mac OS X changes

5, Marble
Rumored redesign of the entire OS’s visual appearance.

6. Tablet
Tablet is completely true. But its not yet ready to be announced.

[ via daringfireball ]

New iPhone Video 2009 codenamed 'Phone 3GS' details


Gizmodo did a very good analysis on the rumor pics that was released this week. And they found out one common details that will have a big probability of iPhone video-conferencing.

Most of the rumors say that there wasn't going to be video-conferencing in the new iPhone 3G 2009. However, a last-minute batch of images point to the contrary.

In the image above, the iPhone on the left looks like it still has its factory plastic cover. You can see that the speaker grill has been moved up, and that there's a spot that may be the front-facing camera.

The one on the right could be the new iPhone 3G 2009's bezel from a Chinese original parts wholesaler. It has the speaker in the same location.

[ via Gizmodo ]

Palm Pre teardown shows iPhone-inspired design

This Palm hardware reminds us a lot more of Apple's engineering style than any of hardware we've taken apart by other manufacturers (like Dell)," the repair site observes.

The Apple-like quality isn't likely to be coincidental. Palm is thought to have scored a coup when it hired Jon Rubinstein as an executive board chairman, supplying it with one of the iPod's key creators. Aside from steering Palm away from an increasingly formulaic series of PalmOS and Windows Mobile devices, Rubinstein is known to have added or replaced many of Palm's engineers with former Apple employees, some of whom had worked on the iPhone earlier in its history.

The Pre's main components exposed but still assembled; a water damage sensor is highlighted on the left. | Image credits: iFixit.


iPhone 3G components laid out at top versus the Palm Pre on the bottom. | Image credits: iFixit.

[ via appleinsider ]

iPhone Video launches Monday June 8

If you will look closely on the back side of this leaked iPhone photo.
The headphone location is on the bottom beside the USB data cable port.
And there's also glowing Apple logo and iPhone text.

Saturday, June 6, 2009

iPhone OS 3.0 leak continues

The new iPhone really looks slim compared to the current iPhones with sliver chrome bezel.
Very interesting... and new details on the speaker was moved up thus removing the ID bezel chrome silver.

But still this look pretty neat!



[via iclarified]

New iPhone V3 2009 Leak Photos

Will this be the new iPhone that will be announced at WWDC on Monday June 8?
A matte black casing with no chrome border and a fornt-facing camer with iPhone OS 3.0.
I can't wait to see this on Monday!

I will be live blogging all the photos of that iPhone announcement event!





[via www.nowhereelse.fr]