News: June 2008 Archives
"At a hardware BOM and manufacturing cost of $173, the new iPhone is
significantly less expensive to produce than the first-generation
product, despite major improvements in the product's functionality and
unique usability, due to the addition of 3G communications... The
original 8Gbyte iPhone carried a cost of $226 after component price
reductions, giving the new product a 23 percent hardware cost reduction
due to component price declines."
Read the full article at iSuppli's Preliminary Study. The image shows the BOM from the iSuppli article. Click on the image for larger version.
The biggest news today is that Nokia is buying the rest of Symbian and releasing it as open source under Symbian Foundation. Nokia is also planning on a big application ecosystem around symbian focusing on bringing web-based services to the handsets. So things are getting interesting. We now have:
So the market is interestingly shifting, and obviously regardless of what Android delivers in the end it looks like its existance has caused some really interesting changes in the mobile landscape. Without Android I don't think Nokia would be doing this.
I'm planning to contemplate some more on how this new picture will change the market... UPDATE: Read Om Malik's commentary on the subject. It's good.
- Google/Android/Open Handset Alliance with massive developer support and well, Google's weight behind it, but no handsets yet
- Apple/iPhone with impressive and proven "next generation" user experience, fully connected with 3G and GPS coming, a very fast growing user base but not "open"
- Nokia/Symbian, not as sexy as Android and certainly iPhone but with a huge huge user base, now going the open route
- And LIMO, promising a fully open Linux for mobile platform, but with pretty young anyway you look at it without the carisma of a Steve Jobs that would pull a zero-to-dominate-the-market-in-sixty-seconds.
So the market is interestingly shifting, and obviously regardless of what Android delivers in the end it looks like its existance has caused some really interesting changes in the mobile landscape. Without Android I don't think Nokia would be doing this.
I'm planning to contemplate some more on how this new picture will change the market... UPDATE: Read Om Malik's commentary on the subject. It's good.
"Early Facebook executive Matt Cohler announced his departure today to join top tier venture fund Benchmark Capital."
TechCrunch has interviewed him and they have talked on a number of topics, from Facebook to Benchmark.
Read the full article at The Matt Cohler Exit Interview.
TechCrunch has interviewed him and they have talked on a number of topics, from Facebook to Benchmark.
Read the full article at The Matt Cohler Exit Interview.
Biggest news today was the new funding for LinkedIn, well, not the funding itself, but the valuation. LinkedIn is now officially worth more than $1 Billion - yes, that's with a B.
Also the folks at Reddit released the reddit,com source code as open source. Aside from some spam control code that they have kept proprietary the rest can be used by anybody to create a post-news-and-let-people-vote service. Thanks guys!
Also the folks at Reddit released the reddit,com source code as open source. Aside from some spam control code that they have kept proprietary the rest can be used by anybody to create a post-news-and-let-people-vote service. Thanks guys!
Ok... The keynote is over. This picture (thanks to Engadget) summarizes the key announcements about iPhone:

The new iPhone - iPhone 3G - will be out on July 11. It has 3G and also GPS (A-GPS), so location based services have a nice platform with location tracking and data connectivity. A lot of enterprise features such as remote wipe, centralized addressbook, etc are built into the device. And the price is $199 for the 8G model - definitely more affordable.
iPhone 3G will be launched in some 70 countries.
Oh, and Apple is replaceing .mac with "me" - with a nice and tight integration of email, calendar, address book, and pictures between iPhone, web browsers, and desktop apps such as Outlook.

The new iPhone - iPhone 3G - will be out on July 11. It has 3G and also GPS (A-GPS), so location based services have a nice platform with location tracking and data connectivity. A lot of enterprise features such as remote wipe, centralized addressbook, etc are built into the device. And the price is $199 for the 8G model - definitely more affordable.
iPhone 3G will be launched in some 70 countries.
Oh, and Apple is replaceing .mac with "me" - with a nice and tight integration of email, calendar, address book, and pictures between iPhone, web browsers, and desktop apps such as Outlook.
So far there has been only one really interesting "news" coming out of Apple WWDC keynote:
"Apple will maintain a persistent IP connection to the phone, where a 3rd party server can ping Apple's notification service to your device. It can push badges, sounds, and custom textual alerts (like how SMSs look)."
This is to avoid running background processes on the device listening for async notifications, which takes away CPU cycles and drains the battery faster.
So Apple is doing a radically different approach: They will maintain a "push" server infrastructure which stays connected to each cell phone. Applications send notification to this server infrastructure which will in turn push it to the device. The connection will stay on, both over wifi and cellular.
"Apple will maintain a persistent IP connection to the phone, where a 3rd party server can ping Apple's notification service to your device. It can push badges, sounds, and custom textual alerts (like how SMSs look)."
This is to avoid running background processes on the device listening for async notifications, which takes away CPU cycles and drains the battery faster.
So Apple is doing a radically different approach: They will maintain a "push" server infrastructure which stays connected to each cell phone. Applications send notification to this server infrastructure which will in turn push it to the device. The connection will stay on, both over wifi and cellular.
A number of blogs are covering the Steve Jobs keynote live. While I'm an avid TechCrunch reader, I have found Engadget's coverage more comprehensive than Michael Arrington's:
Steve Jobs keynote live from WWDC 2008 - Engadget
Also the Engadget page loads faster than TechCrunch's. It looks like the live video feeds are slowing TechCrunch.
Steve Jobs keynote live from WWDC 2008 - Engadget
Also the Engadget page loads faster than TechCrunch's. It looks like the live video feeds are slowing TechCrunch.