iPhone combines three products — a revolutionary mobile phone, a widescreen iPod with touch controls, and a breakthrough Internet communications device with desktop-class email, web browsing, maps, and searching — into one small and lightweight handheld device. iPhone also introduces an entirely new user interface based on a large multi-touch display and pioneering new software, letting you control everything with just your fingers. So it ushers in an era of software power and sophistication never before seen in a mobile device, completely redefining what you can do on a mobile phone.
Sunday, January 21, 2007
iPhone form Apple: Thechnology at highspeed
iPhone combines three products — a revolutionary mobile phone, a widescreen iPod with touch controls, and a breakthrough Internet communications device with desktop-class email, web browsing, maps, and searching — into one small and lightweight handheld device. iPhone also introduces an entirely new user interface based on a large multi-touch display and pioneering new software, letting you control everything with just your fingers. So it ushers in an era of software power and sophistication never before seen in a mobile device, completely redefining what you can do on a mobile phone.
Wednesday, January 3, 2007
smartphones to super-smartphones
What's the rate of improvement of mobile phones? Disconcertingly, the answer is both "surprisingly fast" and "surprisingly slow".
As a fan of rich mobile access to information and communications, I like the first answer and I worry about the second. The first answer reflects the incredible energy and creativity of the mobile phone industry. The second answer reflects some deep-seated challenges. The good news is that there are things we can do to address these challenges.
It's now more than six years since the first smartphones reached the shops. But in the intervening years, they have grown in overall capability by a factor of 10 at least. For example, they're now 10 times as powerful, store 10 times as much data, contain 10 times as many application features, and display 10 times as many pixels on their screens. Much of this increase has been driven by Moore's Law. Six years is long enough to contain four "Moore's Law generations" of 18 months apiece, meaning that the raw silicon power could double four times. That equates to a 16-fold overall increase in power.
In principle, the next six years should see a similar increase in the capabilities of smartphones. The mobile phones of 2012 should be at least another 10 times as powerful, feature-packed, useful and valuable. "Smartphones" will hardly be the word for them ? "supersmart" would be more suited. In comparison, even the best phones of today will look, well, quaint. It's hard to contemplate the kinds of applications that these supersmart phones will enable.
But here are a few possibilities:
.Phones whose cameras can scan text written in foreign languages and foreign character sets, and which can connect to network servers to provide instantaneous translations .Phones whose cameras can recognise the face of someone you are approaching, and which can remind you of the context of your previous meetings .Phones that can analyse your conversations, and in due course even give you advice on how to fare better in similar encounters in the future
However, a series of major challenges stand in opposition to the swift, continuing increase in mobile technology. I call them "horsemen of the apocalypse". They include fire, flood, plague and warfare. "Fire" is the challenge of coping with the heat generated by batteries running ever faster. Alas, batteries don't follow Moore's Law. As users demand more work from their smartphones, their battery lifetimes will tend to plummet. The solution involves close inter-working of new hardware technology (including multi-core processors) and highly sophisticated low-level software. Together, this can reduce the voltage required by the hardware, and the device can avoid catching fire as it performs its incredible calculations.
"Flood" is the challenge of coping with enormous quantities of additional software. Each individual chunk of new software adds value, but when they coalesce in large quantities, chaos breaks loose: software projects delay almost indefinitely in their integration phase (think of Windows Longhorn), and users struggle to find their favourite functionality among seething masses of menu options. As summarised in Brooks' Law (which ought to be as famous as Moore's): "Adding manpower to a late software project makes it later". Like the problem of fire, flood requires more than just money or people to solve the problems it presents. It requires the right core software architecture, which allows add-on software to co-exist harmoniously.
"Plague" is the threat of the destabilisation of the network by viruses and spam. Poor security could lead to the disintegration of the wireless network. Equally worrying, the fear of poor security could lead the network owners to lock down access to their networks, hindering the open introduction of the innovative new services that would otherwise build, unpredictable step by unpredictable step, into the smartphone assets most valued by users. Like both fire and flood, plague requires the right software architecture, implementing platform-level security: a security system that works even without users having to understand it. With platform security in place the industry can benefit from both security and openness, and mobile technology can continue to improve quickly.
This mention of openness takes me to "warfare". This is the most subtle of the challenges, but the one with the biggest impact. I'll take a moment to explain it. A good starting point is the comment made by Monitor's Bhaskar Chakravorti in his book, The slow pace of fast change, when he playfully dubbed a certain phenomenon as "Demi Moore's Law". The phenomenon is that technology's impact in an inter-connected marketplace often proceeds at only half the pace predicted by Moore's Law. The reasons for this slower-than-expected impact are well worth pondering:
New applications and services in a networked marketplace depend on simultaneous changes being co-ordinated at several different points in the value chain .Although the outcome would be good for everyone if all players kept on investing in making the required changes, these changes make much less sense when viewed individually
Sometimes this situation is called "the prisoner's dilemma".
The most interesting (and valuable) smartphone services will require widespread joint action within the mobile industry, including maintaining openness to new ideas, new methods and new companies. It also requires a spirit of "co-operate before competing". If adjacent players in the still-formative smartphone value chain focus on fighting each other for dominance in our current small pie, it will prevent the stage-by-stage emergence of killer new services that will make the pie much larger for everyone's benefit.
Thankfully, although the network effects of a complex marketplace can act to slow down the emergence of new innovations, while that market is still being formed it can have the opposite effect once all the pieces of the smartphone open virtuous cycle have learned to collaborate with maximum effectiveness. When that happens, the pace of mobile change can even exceed that predicted by Moore's Law. That's my vision for smartphones in the next six years.
Treo-680 and Treo 700wx Smartphones
HERNDON, Va.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--IceWEB, Inc., www.iceWEB.com (OTC BB:IWEB) a leading provider of subscription based Hosted Microsoft Exchange services, enterprise software and network security infrastructure services, announced a limited time special offering of its IceMAIL Hosted Exchange service bundled with the Palm® Treo™ 680 or Treo 700wx smartphone from Palm, Inc. available through IceWEB and Simply Wireless Inc.
The limited time offering, available immediately either through IceMAIL’s website www.iceWEB.com, or by calling 1-888-ICEWEB1, is focused toward making business class, IceMAIL Hosted Exchange running on the Treo 680 or Treo 700wx smartphone more affordable for small businesses by significantly lowering their cost of entry.
The $99.00 offer includes a deeply discounted Treo 680 or Treo 700wx ($299.00) smartphone, the “IceMAIL Small Office Bundle” (5 hosted Microsoft Exchange Email accounts, fully functional copies of Microsoft Outlook 2007, online virus scanning and spam filtering, and live synchronization of all Outlook data to the Treo smartphones, at NO CHARGE for 90 days), a free Palm Bluetooth wireless headset, and services from Simply Wireless and Cingular or Sprint. The offer will be available through January 31st, 2007.
Albert Dethlefsen, Business Development Manager for Simply Wireless added, “Simply Wireless is focused on bringing leading edge services and exceptional value to our customers. By marrying free IceMAIL service and the Treo 680 or Treo 700wx smartphone, we feel we’ve given potential clients a package that offers the best services and the best technologies at the best price available.”
“IceMAIL represents the premier business class email and collaboration solution for enterprise communications. Small and medium business customers can rely on IceMAIL, both while in their offices, and (with their Treo 680 or Treo 700wx smartphones) while out of the office to keep them in constant contact with their clients,” said IceWEB VP of Corporate Development, Gary Dunham, “Think of it as cellular on steroids: voice, email, scheduling, contact management, calendars and more for everyone in your organization. For just pennies a day, IceMAIL turns your PDA into an incredibly powerful tool that gives you everything Fortune 500 companies use to coordinate schedules and calendars, manage clients and vendors, track projects and tasks, and much more.”
To be added to our investor relations email list please go to: http://www.iceweb.com/home_investrelations.asp or call Investor Relations at 703-964-8000 ext 0961.
About IceWEB
IceWEB, Inc. (OTC BB:IWEB), utilizes a hosted software services model that brings technologies normally reserved for large corporations to the small business customer. Small businesses can now have the benefits of these more advanced software systems for a low monthly subscription price instead of large up-front capital expenses. IceWEB also provides network infrastructure solutions services to our enterprise and Government customers with a specific focus on network security, authentication, and PKI encryption systems. Founded in 2000, IceWEB is headquartered in Herndon, VA, and serves customers in the public and private sectors. For more information, please visit http://www.IceWEB.com or http://www.IceMAIL.com.
About Simply Wireless
Founded in 1997, Simply Wireless is a leading national provider of wireless technology for consumers and businesses offering Cingular, Sprint Nextel, and T-Mobile as carrier choices. Trained experts offer customers the best, most up-to-date and understandable council in wireless phones, applications, accessories and service plans. Simply Wireless has a presence in 50+ retail stores, online, on the Home shopping Network and through 888-449-9494. Simply Wireless is based in Fairfax, Va. For More information visit http://www.SimplyWireless.com
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