Linked by Thom Holwerda on Tue 16th Feb 2010 15:49 UTC
Thread beginning with comment 409670
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RE: Too little, too late
by google_ninja on Tue 16th Feb 2010 20:18
in reply to "Too little, too late"
RE[2]: Too little, too late
by spiderman on Wed 17th Feb 2010 13:18
in reply to "RE: Too little, too late"
even if they can pull this off, they'll still only offer a subset of the iPhone capabilities (apps and hardware).
I don't think they're targeting smartphones. Smartphones already have their own development platforms and their own app-stores by and large. If smartphones incidentally give some business to this new app-store, I'm sure the operators won't mind, but I think the only logical target for such an endeavor is feature phones.
If they do go with something Java-based, as I predict they will, I think the outlook is decent, since Sun (now Oracle) has already been doing a lot of work (corraling the phone manufacturers when necessary) to repair the compatibility mess that is/was J2ME. For instance, the Light Weight UI Toolkit makes it pretty easy to create very nice-looking apps that work across most phones. In practice, it has been possible for quite a while to target tons of phones with just one Java app--this new app-store will probably just centralize the app repository and maybe specify a unified set of APIs and a test suite for app acceptance. Since the tech's already mostly there, I don't think it will take much more than a year.
Assuming my assumptions are correct
, the question is more for how many more years the feature-phone market will be a prime target? I give it 5 in well-off countries, 10 everywhere else....




Member since:
2005-07-06
Are these the same telco companies that charge 25c per SMS, encouraged a Walled Garden approach with previous mobile software (locked to Telco platform), and after several decades of a monopoly status generally allowed a newcomer to the telephone business and mop the floor with their lazy asses in less than 24 months. The big telcos are dinosaurs when it comes to content / innovation, the only thing they have at this point in time is an expensive backbone which upstarts cannot provide without a ridiculous amount of start up money. These guys have only just now gotten together, it will take over 24 months until they even agree on what standards to pursue, and another 24 months until they actually deliver. And even if they can pull this off, they'll still only offer a subset of the iPhone capabilities (apps and hardware).
Too little, too late.