Tech Roundup – Smart Phone Platforms (Contd)
The Mobile World Congress has ended and general feeling among analysts is that of mild disappointment. But for Microsoft’s fiesty introduction of Windows Mobile 7, the MWC would have fallen flat. During my last post, I deliberately stopped short of commenting on M$ as I still had to understand Windows Mobile 7 better. Now lets go…
- Microsoft & WinMob 7.0: MS impressed mobile enthusiasts with their offering @ MWC’10. WinMob 7.0 has a slick Zune like interface which is both quick and err User friendly. In any case, its evident that MS has laid a lot of emphasis on User Experience. Also, the WinMob application store is up and running but the patronage by developers and consumers is well below par. To improve this MS is offering goodies to developers and start-ups developing Mobile Apps. Another major concern for MS is it lacks solid OEM backing. Nokia and Motorola are out straight away, Samsung, though making Windows phones, is pushing its BADA platform, LGE makes commitments to all kinds of platform vendors but ends up making very few with each of them and the last major OEM Sony-Ericsson too makes smart phones with various platforms and WinMob is just one of them. That leaves MS with tier 2 OEMs like Acer, HTC and Asus which have very little market share and this explains MS’s reduced standing in the mobile market. With a good offering now in the form of Windows Mobile 7.0 we have to wait and watch how MS takes upon the likes of iPhone & Android.
- RIM Blackberry: With a 20% share in the smart-phone segment RIM is another major player with very good grip on an exclusive & premium market. With a great internet ecosystem consisting of services such as Messenger and the usual app-store coupled with a QWERTY keyboard, Blackberry devices are a major hit with executives, managers and other high ranking professionals. The support for Flash and OpenGLES with Blackberry devices is yet another step to market consolidation. These features also clearly distinguish Blackberry devices from iPhone. However the aggressive push by Android is what RIM needs to be wary about. Would like to see how this battle pans out.
- Samsung BADA: Its very brave of Samsung to introduce a platform to rival others with much more strong backing in the consumer and developer markets. Even if BADA is on par with Android or iPhone OS, where will Samsung get the developers from? Apart from Samsung will any other OEM adopt BADA on a reasonable scale? I think we should know more about this platform by the end of this year and I reserve my comments until then.
- LiMO & MeeGo: LiMO has released a developer SDK and a few devices in Japan and Korea. But with Android sweeping away the Linux for Mobile paradigm prospects are appearing bleak for LiMO and as of now no Tier 1 OEM is looking to them in a big way. MeeGo is the result of Intel-Nokia partnership and is a consolidation of Moblin and Maemo – both Linux based platforms. MeeGo is being touted as a good bet in the tablet market. IMO, on one side there seems to be consolidation in the smart phone platform arena but on the other side is a desire for product differentiation which is leading to the creation of newer platforms. These are turbulent times and we have to wait and watch who rides the wave.
I am not discussing WebOS as I have not sufficiently studied it, but with plummeting market share and popularity, it will be a marginal player at best.
Tablets were a talking point at MWC 2010. NVIDIA among others displayed their tablet hardware – Tegra in the case of NVIDIA – running Android OS. This market needs to crystallize on the use cases better and would probably gain momentum in the next 1-2 years. Among other interesting demos were low power consuming LCDs and high performance Mobile GPUs from Imagination and Qualcomm Adreno.
That’s it for now and looking forward to a much more happening MWC next year. Cheers!