Jeff Mitchell

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Updated: 1 day 23 hours ago

my take on iPhone vs Android

Wed, 10/29/2008 - 12:55

So I read this article on the NYT last week and meant to write about it right then and there, but as usual something distracted me and I continue to struggle to maintain my ‘at least once a month’ blog promise.

The premise of the article being that giving consumers choices and creating a competitive marketplace for Android apps is a bad thing, and that a closed system with one party controlling our digital rations is a good thing.

To this I say wha!?

Is there some sort of Stockholm Syndrome thing in the US in relation to the mobile industry.
Maybe it’s more like a technology blind spot.

Since the market has historically been dominated by carriers who controlled access to all services available via mobile it seems that just like the basic assumption that the sun revolves around the earth, (it’s obvious isnt it!?) that this how things are and always will be with mobile technology.
In fact, that is how they should be gosh darn it! I don’t want to hear this poppycock about open access, dumb pipes, etc.

So Apple comes along as the new guy, maintains this paradigm and all is right in the world. See, told you, this is how it is done!

We can trust Apple to be impartial about this, right?

But wait, what is this Android thing!? What do you mean it can be installed on more than one handset, gasp! even possibly on handsets it wasnt built for specifically. ewww, and you can buy “things” for it just anywhere. How vulgar, who knows where that app has been!

Newsflash NYT writer, if online news articles operated on those principles we’d all be going to one website to read your article and you’d have to hope it met all the proper criteria and was approved by the provider of the technology on which it would be viewed.

The biggest difference in iPhone Appstore vs Google Android is that Google isn’t necessarily looking to take a piece of the pie on every sale of an app or handset. They have a very very different approach than Apple and their iPhone strategy.

They are interested in getting something out there that can be ubiquitous fast. If that is propelled along by multiple points of access, appealing to different segments and tastes, as well as by cloned handsets then all the better for them and (in my opinion) the industry

ps. voeveo is one of those back-alley dealers where you will be able to get your Android fix.

Categories: Peeps

iPhone - Truth in Advertising?

Wed, 08/27/2008 - 15:29

It seems that the ASA, a body responsible for advertising standards in the UK, has found and upheld a claim that Apple has been misleading with its current ad campaign which claims that “all the parts of the internet are on the iPhone”.

Whether you agree that Java and Flash specifically are parts of the Internet, I find this encouraging.

Apple has been claiming all sorts of holy grail status regarding iPhone web capabilities, but until the recent 2.0 firmware upgrade and 3G launch it wasn’t even possible to download and save a file unless a ‘hack’ was installed. This is a capability possible for years on some of the lowest end handsets out there, and the fact it wasnt possible on the iPhone has lead to confusion by both the users of the iPhone and those that try to create services accessible by wireless devices.

Flash and Java are just the tip of the iceberg with respect to what features taken for granted are not actually possible on the iPhone. They do expose two holes in the firewall Apple has put in place to prevent “unauthorized” 3rd party access to the device. If Apple allowed Flash and Java to run via the browser, then the App Store becomes less a gatekeeper for apps.

Is Apple likely to allow these features? Probably not soon, but at least we can avoid confusion in the meantime. It also allows other devices to market effectively against the iPhone by highlighting the features they allow compared to the iPhone and prevents Apple from hiding behind broad claims of supporting “all parts of the Internet”.

Categories: Peeps

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