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Cellular and Computing Industries Finally Collide

magarity writes "For years now cell phones have become increasing complex as computers become ever smaller. The two industries now directly collide. Of special interest is the change in mission statement by Microsoft from 'a computer on every desk and in every home' to 'empowering people through great software, any time, any place and on any device.' With mobile phone saturation in the industrialized world from +80% (Italy) to 45% (USA), this is the next battleground for information technology dominance. Both industries have giant sized players; the shakeouts, as well as implications for consumers, will be huge."

23 of 293 comments (clear)

  1. Europeans will have the edge by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Interesting

    "With mobile phone saturation in the industrialized world from +80% (Italy) to 45% (USA),"

    Am I the only one who thinks this indicates that EU countries will be the major players in the future, with MS going by the wayside?

  2. New mission statement by tomhudson · · Score: 4, Funny
    'empowering people through great software, any time, any place and on any device </quote>

    I guess this means they'll stop selling Windows.

  3. Any device? by charleschuck · · Score: 4, Funny
    empowering people through great software, any time, any place and on any device.

    But I thought only NetBSD would run on my toaster...

    -Charles
  4. looking at cellular use objectively by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    What gets lost in this discussion is why cellphone usage so much greater (in terms of percentage) in Europe and Japan is a comparison of the alternatives. How many European and Pacific Rim countries have unmeetered local phone service? That is, talk all you want next door or across town for a very low flat monthly fee?

  5. whats a cell phone good for? by greechneb · · Score: 4, Funny

    Who needs one when you just stay home and read slashdot?

  6. cell phone companies have advantage by pbranes · · Score: 5, Insightful
    I think cell phone manufacturers have a distinct advantage in this area because they have been working for years at making a product that is both user friendly, extremely small, and runs in real-time with no crashes.

    As phones become more intelligent, it only seems natural that phone manufacturers would have an easier time than microsoft because microsoft has to scale down its product, clean out bugs, adapt the software to be real-time --- all while getting new teams organized that have the ability to do this.

    Cell phone companies already have a large number of experienced exployees that have been meeting th ese necessary goals for years.

    1. Re:cell phone companies have advantage by interiot · · Score: 5, Insightful
      • they have been working for years at making a product that is both user friendly, extremely small, and runs in real-time with no crashes.

      To some extent, the stability has been somewhat related to the fact that past phones didn't allow 3rd party apps on the phone without being closely inspected and signed. Now that there are open development environments (eg. WindowsCE, Symbian), cell phone stability could drop to WinCE/PalmOS levels.

      And to be fair, cell phones aren't 100% stable... dropped calls are sometimes the software's fault, it's not always obvious that this is the case because it's easy to assume it's due to radio interference or cell tower issues.

    2. Re:cell phone companies have advantage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Also, remember that the safety aspect is very important regarding cell phones, as a single cell phone could take out an entire cell. I believe that is part of what has delayed MS's entry into this market. It is debatable if they have (had) the capabilities of developing safe small OSes.

  7. 80% italy - why? by mo · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I just returned from Italy and I can attest to the 80% statistic. What totally blew me away was the fact that even very old people all had cell phones. Perhaps somebody can explain what factors cause people in one of the oldest western countries around to conquer the fear of new technology so well.

    1. Re:80% italy - why? by MartinB · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Italy has a pretty low saturation of mobile phones compared to (say) Finland, where the market penetration is over 100% of adults (ie there are more adults with more than 1 mobile phone than there are with none).

      And you wonder why the 2 globally dominant mobile phone operators in both consumer sales and network kit (Nokia and Ericsson) are Finnish...

      --

      The only thing you can accurately describe as "Scotch" is a sticky tape made by 3M. And it's

    2. Re:80% italy - why? by juuri · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Probably because like most of Europe it is far cheaper to put up cell towers than to have wires run everywhere. Americans tend to forget how subsidized our wired telephone system was.

      A quote:

      RIGHT NOISES. That's because Europe's fourth-largest economy suffers from an outdated, expensive telecommunications infrastructure...

      From: http://www.businessweek.com/2000/00_09/b3670213.ht m

      --
      --- I do not moderate.
  8. I was waiting for this war by abhikhurana · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I was actually looking forward to this war. Its been a long time since MS met its match and Nokia is more than a match for MS. Firstly Nokia phones are normally known to be reliable. A fact I cant say about MS software. Secondly Nokia makes these phones so they dont have to convince the phone manufacturers to join the bandwagon. Thirdly, in Europe, anti MS feelings are strong, so I dont think MS can make much of an impact in this market. Fourthly, all the major phone manufacturers have signed up for symbian. And its pretty easy to write applications on that too. Lastly, MS cant arm twist Nokia into carrying their software, mainly because a viable alternative exists. But knowing how MS operates, they may try to pull off something aka Xbox. Don't know how Nokia will counter that.

  9. Promise me something? by MacAndrew · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I'm no Luddite, I think all this innovation is fine and dandy (although, sorry, I do not salivate at the prospect of MS getting into my phone) ... but can anyone promise that I'll still be able to buy plain, simple, boring phones and basically do telephone calls? And don't need an engineering degree to operate? Please?

    This is from someone who misses corded dial telephones that never broke, or if they did the phone company swapped you for a new one. There were a lot of problems with that era, but some nice things, too. I still have a classic ugly-beige tabletop phone with a hard-to-turn dial and a REAL BELL. And even Alexander Graham Bell could probably use it in minutes.

  10. Change in Mission Statement by MartinB · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I think it was pretty inevitable as MS realised:

    1. In the vast majority of profitable markets, they're as close as they're going to get to achieving the old Mission Statement
    2. Once market saturation of PCs had occurred, selling into that market is no longer a cash cow, but a steady, lower residual income of gentle upgrades (now that the Win9x codebase is dead, and Office is as developed as it is, there is no good reason for most organisations to do more than patch and buy new licenses for new machines). So to keep stockholders happy (who remember are not paid dividends - it's all based on shareprice growth), they have to find another market where there could be double digit %age growth year on year.

    Unfortunately for them, they're entering markets with some extremely focused competitors who already dominate the space. In competing against Sony, Nokia and Ericsson (none of whom are likely to miss tricks the way IBM did in the 1980s), Microsoft are discovering what it's like to be on the receiving end.

    --

    The only thing you can accurately describe as "Scotch" is a sticky tape made by 3M. And it's

  11. Re:Yep... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Italy population: 57.3 mil
    Italy size:113,536 sq. mi
    US population: 278.4 mil
    US size: 5,539,224 sq. mi

    people per square mile:
    Italy:504
    US:50

    cellphones per person per square mile:
    Italy:403.2
    US:22.5

    # of cellphones:
    Italy: 45.84 mil
    US: 125.28

  12. Can't wait! by octalgirl · · Score: 4, Funny

    So now I'll have to CTRL-ALT-DEL to access my phone book.
    Will it ask me for an administrators password when I want to change the ring tone?
    And what will I do when I get an 'Ignore/Cancel' error message?
    I can see it now: mid conversation, and all of a sudden a message pops up 'There is a new security patch for your phone. Would you like to install it now?'

  13. Just make the damn phone work by toothless+joe · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Here's a partial list of my priorities when it comes to having a cellphone:

    1) Geographic range
    2) Sound quality
    3) Dropped calls
    .
    .
    .
    75) Playing tetris
    76) Browsing the web
    77) Checking e-mail

    It's a phone, for God's sake.

  14. Re:well duh by muyuubyou · · Score: 4, Informative

    It's not that. Penetration measures against population. That is, 80% of the Italians (some 80 million, not so small) own a cell phone. Italy, Japan, South Korea, Sweden, Finland, Norway, Spain, Netherlands, ... have more users than the USA per inhabitant.

    With such differences, it's not a matter of infrastructure. You can take only those regions with coverage and the difference would still be there. The problem is in the offer.

  15. The fight for digital (as in finger) dominance by circletimessquare · · Score: 4, Funny

    The fight for digital (as in finger) dominance

    Nov 21st 1952
    From The Historiconomist BS edition

    The convergence of slide rules and notepads is bringing the giants of the plastic and paper industries into direct conflict

    IT MAY look like a notepad, but the Orange PenNPaper, launched last month, is much more than that. With its lined pages, multicolored ink and spiral ring spine, it resembles other notepads on the market. But it has one far more significant feature: the lookup tables and conversion formulas on the inside front cover, indicated by the familiar-looking quadratic equation on the upper left side. For the PNP is the first "quick-reference notepad"--in other words, it does things a slide rule does. It is the paper industry's attempt to stake its claim in the new academic community of engineers and scientists created by the convergence of notepads and slide rules. It is no less than a declaration of war.

    --
    intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
  16. Microsoft is screwed... by Andy+Dodd · · Score: 5, Interesting

    They should've realized from the tough time they had against Palm in the PDA market that they should just not even bother with embedded devices.

    In the PDA market, size, reliability, and battery life are major factors, and those three have held WinCE devices back constantly - PalmOS devices have been able to do more with far less. (A 33 MHz Palm is far more responsive UI-wise than a 200 MHz WinCE device, and lasts far longer on battery.)

    Now they're not only up against PalmOS (There are some great PalmOS smarphones out there, such as the Kyocera 6035 and 7135, Treos, and the upcoming Samsung I500 - I don't consider the I300 to be great since it's a PDA first and not a very good phone.) and Symbian (All of the Symbian devices I've seen performed their phone functions very well and had excellent integration.

    What does WinCE have? It doesn't have battery life or reliability, and its hardware requirements mean that CE devices are almost always larger than their PalmOS and Symbian brethren. All three of these factors held CE back in the PDA market, but are even more critical in the phone market, where the Kyocera 6035 (One of the smaller smartphones) is considered to be monstrous in size.

    Every MS-based phone that has hit the market has flopped, and I don't see that changing anytime soon.

    I see Symbian winning the market for "basic" smartphones, and PalmOS winning the market for "power users" who need mainstream PDA capabilities.

    --
    retrorocket.o not found, launch anyway?
  17. Re:Hiptop equipment by bstadil · · Score: 4, Interesting
    Certainly they seemed very functional, but these engineers all still carried laptops

    It's an interesting point but makes little difference. These guys have probably carried laptops for years, as has a lot of other people. The market is flat.

    The issue at hand is where the growth is going to be, being the top dog in a stagnant market is fine but MS' valuation is based on growth. If they can't grow they will be relegated to the status of GM or Exxon.

    Nothing wrong per se but share prices will be 1/5'th of current.

    --
    Help fight continental drift.
  18. Utility Vs. Toy by AmbientNeedle · · Score: 4, Interesting

    This suggests that all computer users are also phone users, and all phone users are computer users. However I'm a computer user, and I do not own a phone (nor do I have plans to). What do I need one for? My communication skills aren't hindered now.

    But I think the other side of the coin is more interesting. Think of all the whiny, screaming. 15 year old high school girls with phones on the oublic bus as they annoyingly try out every ring tone at maximum volume. Think about how they call every single one of their friends over and over again to tell them assanine gossip. Think about their tacky leopard print phone face covers.

    Beh. The phone in America has more of a "toy" feel to me than it does a "utility" feel. Does anyone have any insight as to how the folks in Italy feel about their phones? I can't imagine trying to drive there, I'd be yelling at every other bent-necked wheel-clutching gabber I saw.

  19. Wrong analogy by r_j_prahad · · Score: 5, Funny

    With Microsoft getting involved, it's going to be more than a mere collision... it's going to be a train wreck.