KevMc's Profile

  • Jul 17, 2007
  • 4
  • 0

Latest comments made by: KevMc

  • Yes Rob do not disagree that they are large organisations. Although, they seem to be doing something right given the sheer number of phones these guys (Nokia) turn out, and the market dominance they have. We need to remember the smartphone (however defined) is a small fraction of the total mobile market, which is in excess of 1.2 billion a year Regards Apple, and I am a huge fan being on my 2nd iPod Nano, and bought a Mac after reading the Steve Jobs book iCon. They are without doubt the most innovative company in the high-tech space, and Steve's vision is a big part of this and Steve's micro management works, without doubt. Having played with the iPhone, it is a dream of styling and a wonderful UI. I guess I come back to my main point, which is the PC world and mobile world are different, in their nature and how to get things done and the future is multiple OS, not two. Personally I think Apple will be very successful and appeal to a portion of the market, I do not think Microsoft will disappear, and I think Symbian will continue to grow well, the OEM's own OS will not disappear anytime soon. Apple's entry into the market without doubt will drive innovation in other companies, which I think is a very healthy thing. Symbian to my knowledge has not make such decisions, in the manner described. Especially given its recent growth :) Anyway, enough said from me on this subject :)
    KevMc had this to say on Jul 17, 2007 Posts: 4
    The OS Wars Are Back
  • A comment on Robotech's comments on Symbian- I am afraid I do not agree that 'When a company’s management and operations are controlled by multitude of big multinationals such as Nokia, Ericsson, Sony-Ericsson, Panasonic,Siemens/BenQ (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Symbian) one would cautiously say that they are not free to be creative but driven mostly by the needs of their owners.' Knowing Symbian very well ;) it has never been my impresssion or observation that this is the case. Certainly Nokia has large influence, but who not not listen to the number #1 handset manufacturer :) I am sure Nokia would wish it was different too. Symbian are definately very customer driven, like all good businesses And a correction on the iPod also from Robotech- the iPod nano does indeed have two ARM7 cores (http://www.arm.com/markets/mobile_solutions/armpp/10341.html), but the 2nd gen Nano does not use completely the same arcitecture, the iPhone is very different and has several ARM cores. Also got my grubby hands on the iPhone today- very very cool, the interface is really as good as the adverts- and the texting (which is the acid test for Europe as we send loads) even after several minutes had started to adapt to my two-thumbed typing- Impressive indeed.
    KevMc had this to say on Jul 16, 2007 Posts: 4
    The OS Wars Are Back
  • Chris, thanks :) Enjoyed reading the article as I always enjoy a healthy discussion. There was a rational (I forgot to include) for not thinking it will move the same way as the PC space is that phones are seen as a personal item, a fashion item, whereas very few get really excited by their computer (Mac users are maybe the exception, myself included). As part of that fashion item is the UI and underlying OS, and it capabilities. I agree that Apple, Microsoft and Symbian will be battling away, Linux is OK but heavily fragmented, but I do not see other RTOSs from Nokia, Sony Ericsson and the Nucleus etc disappearing anytime I can see, in fact they seem to keep evolving and looking 'smarter'! My prediction is there will, in the near-future, be no smart/feature phone distinction (less than five years). Within the industry we cannot agree on the distinction anyway, and more importantly consumers definitely do not make that distinction. Rather it will be mobile computing devices (not talking UMPC, as I think the evolution of the mobile phone will be on the only device you carry around with you) and voice-centric, ie ultra-low cost handsets for emerging and developing markets.
    KevMc had this to say on Jul 13, 2007 Posts: 4
    The OS Wars Are Back
  • Have to agree with my other European colleagues, Symbian is hugely popular in all of the world, and one correction on Motorola- they are now committing to more handsets for the US market. Microsoft hardly features in the UK, and Linux not at all I think though at the end of the day the article missed the point. The mobile space is not the same as the PC world, so there will be no OS war, we will have several OS in the market. My personal opinion as someone working in the high-tech mobile world is: - Microsoft will not win this space, as it does not really get the market, especially the relationships. Mobile phone manufactures are distrustful of Microsoft, and do not like the control Microsoft has over the platform. Network operators similarly (the US aside) have Microsoft but it features as one of two devices. -Symbian is seen as a good platform as there are many developers out there (same as Microsoft), and offers a certain amount of standardisation with UIQ and S60, which reduces cost for operators, and is not owned by one company. Symbian has built strong relationships with its partners, where the relationship is a partnership. - I am huge Apple fan, so I think they will do relatively well, maybe surprising us all with their tightly coupled software, hardware and service. I am really looking forward to Apple driving other companies to innovate more and I am sure there are several ways to implement interfaces like Apple's and not infringe patents. Would I buy an iPhone? Jury is out right now, having not played with one yet. 3G is probably a show stopper for me as personally I travel a lot for work, and 3G is needed for Japan and Korea. Most friends I talk to do not know what 3G is, let alone care. - Ultimately for me, and the main point is the smart-phone market definition is really a grey area, when does a feature phone become a smart-phone? Consumers certainly do not care and why should they? My Nokia 6280 and N95 from a user perspective are almost identical, both support PIMs and decent data connections. With Nokia pushing WiFi and GPS in feature phones too. Nokia's S40 NOS is the most widely used OS in mobile phones world-wide, and its capability continues to improve. I see Symbian pushing down and feature phone OS pushing up. Hence why I say I do not think there will be an OS war.
    KevMc had this to say on Jul 13, 2007 Posts: 4
    The OS Wars Are Back