Posts Tagged ‘icloud’
BlackBerry Mobile Fusion Heralds the ‘ITization of the Person’
People’s unofficial use at work of personally-bought smartphones will lead to personal devices and personal information being managed by corporate IT departments. RIM has just announced BlackBerry Mobile Fusion, a new product to help companies manage the proliferation of employee-bought smartphones and tablets connecting to company networks.
Fusion has support for employees to use a single device for both work and home, the ability to manage multiple devices per person — critical in an era where individuals routinely use smartphones, tablets and notebook PCs in tandem — and self-service for individual employees to lock their phone if it’s lost or stolen.
But consumer smartphone owners already routinely have many of these abilities, even if their smartphones are not used for work, or provided by their employer. While RIM has been slow to extend its core expertise into the consumer market, other than with BlackBerry Messenger (BBM), numerous other companies have jumped into the fray and offered consumer versions BlackBerry’s enterprise features upon which RIM’s phone success was originally built.
The ‘ITization of the Person’ is already well underway. Here’s a selection of the many examples where consumers have corporate-style IT tools to manage their digital lives:- Read the rest of this entry »
The BlackBerry BIS Outage is a Bigger Threat to RIM than the iPhone 4S or Android Ice Cream
RIM’s BlackBerry customers are experiencing a further outage as the BlackBerry Internet Service (BIS) fails again (BBC News coverage) for the second day of problems. The issues started yesterday, on Canadian Thanksgiving. RIM is a Canadian company. These service faults cover a wide geographical region across Europe, Middle East and Africa but not North America. BIS is the network service that powers consumer email, BlackBerry Messenger (BBM), and other BlackBerry Internet functions for consumers. SMS and voice calling is unaffected.
This isn’t the first such problem with BIS (or see here), but the timing is horrific, for multiple reasons:
- BBM rival iMessage arrives tomorrow on Wednesday, October 12. iMessage is a part of the iOS5 update for iPhones, iPads and recent iPod Touch models. Similarly to Facetime’s integration with voice telephony, iMessage replaces an iPhone’s SMS app and automatically delivers the improved messaging experience if the phone knows a recipient is also an iMessage user. It also uses Apple’s cloud service to sync messages across the iPad and iPod Touch that lack SMS messaging ability.
- The new version of Android, Ice Cream Sandwich, is imminent. While Apple is the key competitor for all high end smartphones, it’s Android-powered phones that threaten to eat into RIM’s Curve & BBM toting young customers.
- RIM is suffering a fall in device unit shipments. That’s perhaps too mild a summary, RIM has reported a terrible set of results for its most recent quarter combined with appalling sales for the PlayBook tablet. RIM needs to be able to devote its resources and prestige to expand with new innovations and not run to stand still by patching old services such as BIS for existing users.
- RIM is midway through a risky technology transition. Current BlackBerry smartphones run an evolved version of the same software they have for years. The new QNX software is in development and is on which RIM’s future depends. RIM will have to persuade current users to transition to this new product range that will almost certainly have some irritations for long term users, even if QNX smartphones are excellently executed. Long term users often dislike small changes that new users wouldn’t notice.
iPhone 4S Is a Worldphone That’s Not, as Apple Positions to Counter Android
Apple’s product announcements today are a tale of two iPhones: the iPhone 4States and the Immortal 3GS.
Today at Apple’s annual event, new CEO Tim Cook unveiled evolved iPods, a new dual core iPhone 4S, and the voice-controlled virtual assistant based on Apple’s acquisition of Siri. He also recapped on iOS5 and iCloud which were announced back in June. Although Apple sell two thirds of their iPhones outside the US, I fear that the most innovative new parts of the iPhone 4S product design will appeal most to a US audience. Apple will still do well globally, but it could do even better with some tweaked product thinking.
Much more significantly, Apple now is moving to a three iPhone model portfolio: Apple will continue to sell both last years’ iPhone 4 and the previous years’ iPhone 3GS at cheaper price points. This will dramatically boost Apple’s phone sales volumes and enable Apple to compete head on with more Android smartphones.
The Immortal iPhone 3GS
The decision to keep on the 3GS as well as the old iPhone 4 is a massive move for Apple. It will extend the iPhone competitive threat to rivals into the mid tier of the mobile market. Apple’s competitors have often sidestepped the full force of the iPhone threat by positioning their models as cheaper phones. That strategy is now being squeezed and may become untenable in the US market.
Apple is positioning to counter Android with the new pricing and continued use of the iPhone 3GS.
Apple is motivated by great margins and not premium end user prices. If Apple can deliver keen prices to grab a market without sacrificing margins they will. The growth of the iPod product portfolio over the years as Apple’s economies of scales have enabled them to maintain margins yet lower prices demonstrates Apple’s aspirations: the new 2011 iPod Nano is the cheapest Nano Apple has ever launched. As the iPhone 3GS is so old, component prices will have fallen and Apple will have steadily improved manufacturing to minimize defects.
Those that are disappointed by the iPhone 4S’s identical appearance to its predecessor forget the success that its forerunner model enjoyed and in fact still enjoys. Back in 2009 there were similar comments to those being made today: Then, the new iPhone 3GS looked just the same as the older iPhone 3G. Those people were wrong then and so are they now:
“Let’s Talk iPhone” – Where to follow the Apple iPhone event live online
The sites below will be providing live coverage of Apple’s 2011 iPhone event where new iPhones will be unveiled, either the iPhone 4S and/or iPhone5.
I’ll be analyzing the news live on twitter, follow me here @ianfogg42 or read now these just published pieces of Apple analysis: On a core part of iOS5, Apple’s iCloud Enables A Post-PC World That Will Boost iPad & iPhone Sales; and on how to compete with Apple, Apple’s Metrics Demonstrate the Need for Strategy, not Tactics, to Counter the iPhone.
The event starts at 10am Pacific, 1pm Eastern, 6pm UK and 7pm CET.
Here’s the list of sites with live coverage:
- This is my next / The Verge: Liveblog
(lots of great ex-Engadget folks) - Macworld / PC World: Liveblog
- Cnet: Liveblog
- Engadget: Liveblog
- Gizmodo: Liveblog
- Arstechnica: Liveblog
- Slashgear: Liveblog
- Guardian: Liveblog Link live from 30m before the start
- Zdnet: Liveblog
- gdgt: Liveblog (more ex-Engadget folks)
- Financial Times: Liveblog
After the event has finished, Apple will post a video of the presentation here: http://www.apple.com/apple-events/ and as a podcast on iTunes. Apple are not offering a public live video stream this year.
Update, my analysis of Apple’s announcements is here: iPhone 4S Is a Worldphone That’s Not, as Apple Positions to Counter Android
Apple’s iCloud Enables A Post-PC World That Will Boost iPad & iPhone Sales
With the launch of the 2011 iPhone models, Apple will also launch iCloud, a new online services play that replaces MobileMe. This is a part of the iOS5 software that will be available for free to existing iOS devices and will ship as standard on new iPhones, iPads and iPod Touch’s.
This is a core part of Apple’s near term strategy to drive greater device sales — iPhone, iPad, iPod Touch and Mac — as Apple builds a post-PC world. Over the long haul iCloud will also help Apple’s content and services revenues but that won’t be its most important initial impact.
Apple still makes the vast bulk of its revenues from hardware sales despite having by far the most successful app store, music download store and various other services initiatives. Example: In the first three years after the launch of the Apple App Store Apple generated $1.1bn in revenue from iOS apps (1). But this figure is dwarfed by their iOS device revenues of over $100bn in the same period (2). Apple has great margins on those hardware revenues too.
Because of that hardware model, Apple has enormous incentives to create new product features to drive device sales, even if that means offering those new features or services for free. Apple can be disruptive with “free” offerings too. The “contagion of free” business models are not just the preserve of Google and Valley-based VC-funded startups.
This is the cloud the way it should be: automatic and effortless. iCloud is seamlessly integrated into your apps, so you can access your content on all your devices. And it’s free with iOS 5. — Apple marketing, October, 2011
Those devices sales give Apple a massive incentive to package its cloud services for free. In so doing, Apple undermines those that have cloud-based services as their core business. This includes Google. Although Google charges for few cloud services — the main exception being Google Apps for businesses — it still generates direct advertising revenues across all of its cloud services such as Gmail. So, if people choose to use Apple’s services instead of Google it still hurts Google’s bottom line.
iCloud supports Apple’s desire to sell more devices by helping two overlapping groups of consumers:




