Industry experts have warned that
Apple's
iPhone is "no
smartphone" and is not as technologically advanced as many reports would
suggest.
Senior
ABI
Research analysts Stuart Carlaw, wireless research director, and Philip
Solis, principal mobile broadband analyst, pointed out that, while the iPhone is
"undoubtedly clever and capable, it is not actually a smartphone".
"Consumers will not be willing to settle for a second-rate cellphone just to
have superior music," said Carlaw.
"Apple must get the phone engineering part of the equation right, and it is
difficult to see how it will accomplish this with no track record in the
industry.
"Even though it is working with some prominent suppliers, the task of putting
all the building blocks together cannot be underestimated."
ABI Research defines a smartphone as a cellular handset using an open,
commercial operating system that supports third-party applications.
Apple's iPhone runs the Mac OS X operating system, so at first glance it
would seem to fall into the smartphone category which might help to justify its
$500+ price tag.
But Solis pointed out that the device will be closed to third-party
applications. "Therefore we must conclude at this point that, based on our
current definition, the iPhone is not a smartphone: it is a very high-end
feature phone," he said.
Solis went on to explain that feature phone functionality is dictated by the
software which controls the hardware.
Such devices are closed and controlled by an operator or device manufacturer,
whereas smartphones are supported by a third-party ecosystem in which
independent software vendors compete to create commercially successful apps.
"Feature phones have third-party applications too, but these are relatively
weak and limited applications that work with the middleware such as Java and
Brew," explained Solis.
"Applications designed for smartphones can be written to access core
functionality from the operating system itself, and are therefore usually more
powerful and efficient.
"The competition in an open environment also yields more cutting-edge, rich
applications."
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