Search Here To Find Out Anything Shortcut

Thursday, October 15, 2009

Smartphones Battle Begins !













Collection : BBC news

Smartphones are going mass market, fuelled by the public's "insatiable appetite" for social media, analysts say.They predict an explosion in sales alongside price falls for smart handsets next year. It comes in a week which sees the launch of Blackberry's latest handset, the Storm 2.

Meanwhile the Palm Pre, dubbed an "iPhone killer" finally makes its UK debut."The mobile internet is at the same stage as the internet was in 1998," said Ian Fogg, an analyst with research firm Forrester. Ben Wood, an analyst with CCS Insight, agrees.

"We are on the cusp of an explosion of computer-like devices in the hands of consumers where previously they were the preserve of the early adopter," he said.

"Social networks are the fuel propelling the momentum," he added. Increasingly mobile operators and handset manufacturers are providing phones that are "a one-stop shop for social messaging whether that be Twitter alerts, instant messages or the latest pictures on Facebook," said Mr Wood.

It could be time to drop the label "smartphone" thinks Forrester analyst Ian Fogg. "Most handset makers are looking to add internet capabilities to their ranges. It is no longer about whether a phone can access the internet but how well," he said.

New markets

Nothing illustrates the rise of the smartphone into the mainstream better than the the story of Blackberry. RIM (Research in Motion), the company behind the Blackberry family, has transformed itself in recent years, with a range of handsets reaching far beyond its original corporate demographic.

Its Curve series has become one of the fastest selling smartphones on the market. In August 2009, RIM announced that it had sold 65 million Blackberry smartphones worldwide.

But it has yet to corner the apps market in the same way as Apple's iPhone has. While developers have written around 85,000 applications for the iPhone, there are only around 2,000 for Blackberrys.

The Blackberry Storm 2 is released on 15 October and addresses some of the issues of the original handset. It sees new touchscreen technology to improve the typing experience and make it more like using a traditional keyboard.

iPhone killer

The following day sees the release of the Palm Pre in the UK, a much-anticipated device which has been in development for seven years. It debuts its own operating system - webOS - which aims to mimic desktop operating systems.

It allows users, for instance, to switch between applications in the same way as programs are multi-tasked on a home computer. It has been touted as an "iPhone killer" since its release in the US in June.

Figures from market research firm TNS suggest the Pre-Palm launch could outshine the debut of the iPhone in 2007. It surveyed 1,000 UK adults and found that 27% of existing 02 customers would be "keen to buy" the Palm Pre, compared with 17% wanting the iPhone prior to launch.

It will be available via 02, to anyone signing up for a two-year £34.26 monthly contract. For those reluctant to sign up for lengthy contracts, smartphones are currently expensive. To get a "pay and go" version of 02's iPhone 3G, for example, will cost a hefty £342.50.

According to Forrester the prepaid market in the UK accounts for around 65% of mobile users but data tariffs for users are not as attractive as those on contracts. For anyone on a contract, mobile internet is bundled pretty much as standard these days.

If smartphones are to go truly mass market cheaper handsets and data charging tariffs that are attractive to the pre-paid market will be essential said Mr Wood.

"£35 a month is a lot of money to some and we predict that smartphones will be available below £100 in 2010, alongside tariff innovation," he said.

0 comments:

 

Information of life Auto Insurance Donation and Attorney Copyright © 2008