Major Hangups Over the iPod Phone 432
chadwick writes "It seemed like a sure thing: the iPod mobile phone. What could be more irresistible than a device combining the digital-music prowess of Apple Computer (AAPL) with the wireless expertise of Motorola (MOT)? Motorola sent its buzz machinery into overdrive in January when it leaked word that the product would debut at a cellular-industry conference in New Orleans in mid-March. Well, hold the phone. At the New Orleans confab, a frustrated Edward Zander, Motorola's chief executive, stood before a roomful of analysts and reporters and said the handset's debut would have to wait. "
Pre announcements (Score:5, Interesting)
Showing precisely why pre-announcement of products only leads to problems, frustrations, and customer dissatisfaction.
Only announce products when they are done and ready to ship and you avoid this sort of garbage. Everybody is speculating on just what the hold-up is. It could be that the phone is not ready or that the wireless carriers are trying to extract every last cent out of somebody else's (Apple and Motorola) hard earned work. But the point is that there is now a consumer expectation and they are complaining to Apple and Motorola saying "why can't you get your $#!t together and release the product?" when it may actually be the fault of Verizon, Cingular et. al. The problem of course is that on sales of the songs themselves, Apple's profit is next to nothing. So having other companies try and muscle in on very thin margins means 1) either somebody has to take it in the shorts or 2) we all lose. Of course if the record labels would allow more access to the music for Internet delivery, it would be treated as the commodity it really is and there would be more room for profits from higher volume, but that is another post.
Oh, and it would be nice if people who are submitting articles would actually summarize the story rather than posting verbatim what the writer of the referenced article says.
Re:Pre announcements (Score:5, Interesting)
But then you forget how the market reacts. You pre-announce a product, or an idea, and when it makes sense and gets buzz, your stock goes up. But when you announce you need more time, nothing bad happens. (or at least you don't lose your previous gains) So, when you need capital to do such a thing, you pre-announce. Nobody gets hurt...you'll get your iPod phone soon enough, if of course, you can spend the dollars.
Re:Pre announcements (Score:5, Insightful)
But it is of course dishonest to both your customers and shareholders. For companies that want to build quality relationships with their customers, this is bad policy. You've heard of vaporware? Yeah, that's what your customers begin to expect and why companies like Microsoft, HP (under Carly) and others have lost the respect of many of their customers. Concept products are one thing, in that they are designed to get a feeling for how your customer base would react to such a product, but there is no expectation of that concept being actually produced in its current form. Pre-announcing is simply dishonest.
Re:Pre announcements (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Pre announcements (Score:5, Insightful)
But according to the article the problem isn't that the phone isn't ready, the problem is the carriers don't want to sell it unless they can charge $.99 each song you install. By announcing it, consumers can pressure the carriers to support the phone.
Of course, this sounds a bit odd, as carriers still sell phones that don't support all those wacky pictures and backgrounds, and being the only carrier to sell the iPod phone seems like a great draw to me. So Moto might be playing the blame game as a diversion to buy more time, though I can't imagine there's anything complex about taping a cell phone to an iPod beyond where do the buttons go and how long do the batteries last...
Re:Pre announcements (Score:5, Informative)
Guess why the US lags in mobile phone use? - stupid monopolies doing stupid things and the customers having to take it as it's the only game in town - literally sometimes.
As an alternative consider Hong Kong where I live.
There are something like 6 mobile phone companies (plus virtual operators) all competing for the same 7 million people. Almost everyone buys their phones at retail with no lock-in on the carrier that they use. I have bought subsidised phones but they are always cheap and nasty - I gave them to my parents to take back to the homeland as there's no carrier lock-in.
The way all these carriers compete is on call cost and service. It is very cheap to make calls in Hong Kong, free SMS, voicemail, call forwarding. Free calls within the network for designated numbers (Girl Friend to BF for instance) - and most crucially - you pay to both make AND receive calls on your mobile phone.
You pay for the convenience of receiving calls when you're out and about. Or to make calls when you're out. But interestingly land lines do NOT pay a toll to call a mobile.
Best yet is that you can call divert your phone to a landline and no one pays to make the call to your mobile number... unless the calling party uses a mobile.
What this does is encourage people to make lots of calls on their mobile and use it for their main number as no one cares that it is a mobile number - no cost to call it. Hong Kong was first to allow number transfer between carriers resulting in a market that is hugely competitive.
So we have low call costs, lots of value added services, everyone using mobile phones for most of their calls, many people have more than one phone (work, family and mistress
It is a totally different economy for mobile phones in Hong Kong. But there is a way to change the game for the US.
So to the iPod phone... In this HK context the choice of phone comes down to what people want to buy - usually the latest and greatest fashion phone. An iPod phone would be hugely popular here. It would be another fashion phone, the coolest must have toy. And as most people get their phones from suppliers other than the carriers there is no subsidy and nothing stopping an iTunes phone for Hong Kong.
But think of it in reverse: If Apple released an iPod with phone functionality at a slight premium over a standard iPod - say like the iPod Photo is a premium iPod... then it would not need subsidy. It's an iPod not a phone.... no one buys subsidised iPods.
But what has been spoken about is a phone with limited iTunes support - so you enter the realm of carrier subsidy. Wrong way to look at it totally.
I'd buy an iPod 40GB with GSM phone like a shot. And I'd pay HKD$4000 to do so. That's around $500 USD.
I would NOT pay HKD$800 ($100 USD) for a shitty subsidised phone with iTunes that locks me into bad expensive service from one carrier.
So what does Apple want to do? Sell iPods or license iTunes to phone manufacturers? There's no option to my mind. Screw the US carriers and change the game!
Re:Pre announcements (Score:5, Informative)
You pay for the convenience of receiving calls when you're out and about. Or to make calls when you're out. But interestingly land lines do NOT pay a toll to call a mobile.
Best yet is that you can call divert your phone to a landline and no one pays to make the call to your mobile number... unless the calling party uses a mobile.
What this does is encourage people to make lots of calls on their mobile and use it for their main number as no one cares that it is a mobile number - no cost to call it. Hong Kong was first to allow number transfer between carriers resulting in a market that is hugely competitive.
So we have low call costs, lots of value added services, everyone using mobile phones for most of their calls, many people have more than one phone (work, family and mistress
You haven't actually looked at cell phone plans in the US much lately have you?
The only difference with what you describe is that in the US is the contract bundle phones (if you go that route) aren't complete utter crap.
Re:Pre announcements (Score:3, Interesting)
You can, as long as the carriers in question are using the same technology, and you didn't benefit from a healthy subsidy on the phone. Go buy a full retail-priced GSM phone, and get a SIM card for whatever carrier you want to use. Buy a full price CDMA phone, and you can have whatever CDMA carrier you want service it.
It's the
Re:Pre announcements (Score:3, Interesting)
b) You can't get those phones here because the network infrastructure here doesn't support them. Economics of scale...Hong Kong=small; US=way bigger -- that technology doesn't come for free or deploy to rural areas by itself. It works in Hong Kong due to the population density.
c) Cell phone companies don't control what price cell phone manufacturers charge for phones
d) Contracts aren't
Re:Pre announcements (Score:4, Interesting)
Actually, the real reason is that the land line infrastructure in the US isn't the complete crap it is in other countries. I've been to a lot of countries overseas and worked with quite a few foreigners here in the US. I know that, at one time, it would take up to six months to get a land line phone in Germany. The union got the government to make it illegal for anyone else to hook up a phone, and they would dig a new trench from the box to your house for every new hookup, then dig it up when you had it disconnected.
And from what I've heard, the situation in India was dire.
So if you're blaming government monopolies and stupid monopolies, you're partly right, but probably not in the way you thought.
Re:Pre announcements (Score:4, Interesting)
The thing that the breakup was supposed to do was to take an excellent phone system and make even more excellent. The idea was that providers would introduce digital services to compete with each other. In point of fact it was probably the worst thing they could have done to promote digital services. There was very little effort to promote digital services, since supporting them was expensive. People who insisted on getting ISDN soon found the telcos were terrible at provisioning and supporting the services because they hadn't made the investments in training and staffing needed to do a half way decent job.
The choice for a telco was simple -- spend money convincing people to buy into an expensive service they didn't understand and then spend tons of money to support it, or compete on price. Well, the rest as they say is history. We've had over a incredibly low prices on phone calls, and only recently had telcos competing to bring digital services to the home through DSL.
The thing is, while we clearly benefit from cheaper calls, and Internet technology is probably more flexible than ISDN, it has come at a price. Life is more complicated. Nobody had to understand anything like a "calling plan", unless you were a government regulator. The cost of figuring this out and managing telephone use in business has to be set against the direct cost savings. This is not to mention the horribly pushing telemarketers trying to get you to switch to some fly-by-night telephone company, which was the spam problem of the 80s.
There's a net benefit of course, but I suspect that most of us when we are on our deathbed would probably like to have the time we spent comparing calling plans back. Heck, I'll probably want my
Don't release it untill it's ready for sale. (Score:5, Interesting)
If you announce an iTunes / Motorola Cellphone before it is ready to hit the market, you adversely affect current sales of iPods and Moto phones. People like to have the next best thing, and they hate buying something that's outdated in a month. Consumers will usually hold off on purchasing a new device if they can get a cooler device in a few months / weeks.
This is precisely why Apple usually announces hardware and sells it the very same day. If they don't do that, they have to liquidate a load of outdated hardware. Consumers won't buy a 15 gig iPod if they know a 20 gig with more features will be on sale for the same price next month.
The only time Apple doesn't do this is when they have a future product that doesn't directly compete against what they are currently selling.
Apple has one of the best inventory records in the tech industry. Motorola should listen them.
Re:Don't release it untill it's ready for sale. (Score:4, Informative)
I don't know. They did pretty well with car radios, televisions, and then later on the cell phone (a Motorola invention), then the StarTAC, and now the Razr.
Apple does alright too, but Motorola has a pretty good track record with making stuff people want to buy.
Also, what kind of crack are you smoking?
This is precisely why Apple usually announces hardware and sells it the very same day.
Apple is infamous for announcing a product they know they won't be selling/shipping for months.
Re:Pre announcements (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Pre announcements (Score:2, Interesting)
Ok, maybe it's not exactly the same, but wireless companies seem pretty greedy and I read an article somewhere that said they make a hefty chunk of change by passing telecom fees directly to the consumer.
Re:Pre announcements (Score:3, Informative)
Actually, cellular companies make a hefty profit by reselling the phones. They only "lose" money on the free phones. All the "discounted" phones are still above their costs. They just jack them up significantly and then drop them back down to a reasonable level when you buy the 2yr contract.
Re:Pre announcements (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Pre announcements (Score:3, Insightful)
You can buy lots of things at lower retail costs overseas. Take the recent discussions about textbook costs. But the higher price in the US isn't because of the retailer making a higher margin, it's because their wholesale cost is higher.
So even though a consumer may be able to buy phone x overseas for USD200, it doesn't mean that the US carrier doesn't have to pay USD250 for them.
Re:Pre announcements (Score:2, Informative)
Actually, I believe the poster is just stating a bit of widely-reported information:
http://www.theregister.co.uk/2003/11/07/your_99c_
At an Apple financial analyst conference on Wednesday CEO Steve Jobs admitted that Apple makes no revenue from the online download service, the iTunes Music Store, that he launched in April.
Re:Pre announcements (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Pre announcements (Score:5, Insightful)
Where did you check? Because the numbers I have (as a shareholder) reveal that margins are closer to 6%. Analysts such as Piper Jaffray estimate its anywhere from %5 to 10% and some analysts have suggested that Apple has actually lost some money in the first year on iTunes.
You obviously have no concept of margins in e-commerce. Otherwise you wouldn't be saying that.
My investment portfolio says otherwise.
Next time try to make your argument stick in real world scenerios......
What is it that we are talking about here? In case you did not know, the iTMS is a real world investment.
rather than make believe BS you want to spout off to try to look smart
I'll let the Ph.D. and my publications speak to that. Look, there is no need to be rude on this forum as there are many here that are trying to keep Slashdot an informative place to go. What exactly is it that you are trying to say?
Re:Pre announcements (Score:5, Interesting)
You were pretty harsh for someone who is so totally wrong. While the exact numbers are not available, it is believed that 60-65 cents is what goes to the record label. There are additional costs associated with the song publisher and the technology infrastructure that's required. So your claim of a 40% direct margin doesn't come close to including all direct costs, and completely ignores indirects.
It looks like you don't have any concept of margins at all, e-commerce or otherwise, the different types of margins that get calculated, or how margin differs from net profit. But hey, you did get to make a nasty crack about Apple iPod fanboys, right?
Apple claims the music store is a breakeven deal, and others estimate they make roughly 4 cents a song. That's a pretty trivial amount flowing through to Apple's bottom line. To put this into a "real world scenario" for you -- iTMS downloads are now estimated at well over 1,000,000 per day. [theregister.co.uk] Your ridiculously inaccurate numbers would mean that Apple is netting over $100 million a year from music downloads -- nearly double Apple's entire net profit in 2003 and more than 2/3 of their incredible 2004 results. [apple.com] I find that scenario, um, unlikely.
To make this a little simpler for you: Apple's goal is to make money and increase its stock price. They benefit from hugely successful and profitable products. Believe me, if the iTMS store was profitable, Apple would not keep it a secret and deceive us all with a fabricated story that they're just breaking even.
Re:Pre announcements (Score:3, Insightful)
I think your con
Re:Pre announcements (Score:3, Interesting)
This is exactly what they are doing. The only difference is they don't have to buy 100,000 at a time. They just have to report which ones they sold and collect their check.
It is a zero inventory resale business. The cost of goods sold calculation is NOT more involved, if anything less involved. With a physical pro
Say WHY (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Say WHY (Score:2, Insightful)
Hey Mods: The TRUTH is NOT flamebait! (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Hey Mods: The TRUTH is NOT flamebait! (Score:5, Insightful)
I'm a student, and since I'm simply not grounded enough to have a landline, I have a cellphone. Helps me when I take weekends off and shift apartments and dorms every other semester.
Quite honestly, while all the features sound oh-so-cool and and wonderful, I do not honestly care - I have a very basic phone that lets me do ONE thing properly - TALK. Any phone with decent battery life, good signal reception and a clear channel is good enough. Often times, the base model does suffice and that's more than sufficient for me.
Hell, who cares? If I wanted to send images and stuff, I'd get a good enough PDA for that. A phone is primarily a communication device. Any fancy stuff merely eats up battery.
And oh, as someone who does a lot of outdoor stuff, I've come to realize that battery life is quite important, and more features just eat up more battery life real quickly.
So, to answer your question - the kind who pay to buy crippled stuff are mostly the dumb folks (and usually with cash to blow for spending just $2.50 per MMS or whatever) or the folks who want the latest cool thing (the Oooh! Lookie there! Shiny, shiny! My phone can do _this_! That makes me _so_ proud of my manhood). Very few have a genuine need to see a movie on their cellphone or have any use for any of the quintillion features that the phone may have.
What bloody difference does it make? It's a thing for talking, for cryin' out loud. Bah!
Well then. (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Well then. (Score:5, Informative)
Huh? What are you talking about?
Motorola is a US corporation, traded on the NYSE (ticker symbol MOT). Its headquarters are in Schaumburg, Illinois. How does that make it German?
Re:Well then. (Score:2)
Re:Well then. (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Well then. (Score:2)
Re:Say WHY (Score:2)
I was lucky to get my T616 before Cingular started on the Verizon kick, crippling phones. Luckily hardware companies are more than happy to sell their products directly.
I remember going into a Cingular store and the guy behind the desk didn't even know what firmware was. I asked if there was anyone that worked there that could actually do more than
This is why US is waaay behind in cellular tech.. (Score:5, Informative)
Synchronizing the phones with computer is standard there, and so is "SMSing" ringtones. If one person buys a ringtone from the carrier (which is around 8 cents), that ringtone can be SMSed to all the friends. There is a nominal charge for SMS also, basically its a huge market which people simply love.
What sucks here is iTunes sells whole song for 99c, and the f**** cell phone carrier sells the MIDI file for that song for 3 dollars, that expires in 3 months!!!! No wonder people use sites like 3guploads.com or PitPim to put ringtones on their phones. The carriers are simply killing the technology by locking too much stuff.
Re:This is why US is waaay behind in cellular tech (Score:4, Informative)
Am I happy with my carrier?
Damn straight!
Re:This is why US is waaay behind in cellular tech (Score:2)
Re:This is why US is waaay behind in cellular tech (Score:2)
1. Networks (Own the towers, numbers of these are limited by government licenses).
2. Operators (Buy capacity on the networks, subsidize the cost of phones tied to their contracts).
3. Phone manufacturers.
4. Stores.
1&2 may be the same company.
European phone manufacturers are of course already in the US, e.g. Nokia. Not sure about the operators, but if not, it's probably due to being locked out by the existing networks.
iPod Cell Phone? (Score:5, Funny)
I could get behind that.
Re:iPod Cell Phone? (Score:2)
Re:iPod Cell Phone? (Score:4, Funny)
Girlfriend: Did you just dial my best friend's number on me? How the hell do you know her number?!
Recipe for disaster.
Same issues as usual, actually (Score:4, Interesting)
Handset makers want to stylize their phone as much as possible. Adding features and making their phone stand out from the rest of the pack. Operators want all the phones to support a certain set of basic functionality and fit into a certain form factor. They don't want to allow the handset maker's trademarks overshadow their own. On the other hand, the makers want it to be obvious to the user who the maker of that phone is.
Apple, and to a large extent Microsoft too, have very strong brands. They love branding. That's why we're talking about an iPhone and not an Apple-produced cell phone. But operators don't want that kind of power shifted into the hands of the makers.
So you get what we have here, which is the way he wants it.
Microsoft loves branding. (Score:3, Funny)
The problem is, with Microsoft branding, the experience is a lot like what a cow feels at the end of the roundup. "Yeeha! Dogies. Stand still so we can brand you with the MS of the Billygates Ranch. The brandin' irons are heatin' up."
Re:Same issues as usual, actually (Score:3, Informative)
uhhh (Score:5, Interesting)
The ipod is pretty tough yea, but it wouldn't last a week in the chassis of my mobile phone.
Nor would I want my phone to have a net worth of $400 either.
Can we get over this fixation with phone/mp3/toaster oven/breadmakers already? Their day has come and gone. I want devices grouped by how I use and abuse them.
Re:uhhh (Score:2)
Ignoring this, who the hell is going to pay to download a song to their phone when they have already legally purchased it? I have camera phone and its rediculus how much they charge you to email/uploa
it's flash based storage (Score:2)
i don't think it's iPod + phone as much as a phone with a built in flash drive and some slimmed down version of the iPod's software. i
Re:uhhh (Score:2)
Re:uhhh (Score:2)
Further, since you don't want a $400 phone (newsflash: if you pay $200 for a phone with a new contract, it's worth probably about $400) that means you're not interested in having a phone that can play mp3's.
The toaster-oven idea really is the holy grail of mobile devices. Don't compare it to software toaster-oven (say, Mozilla suite) because I don't have to physically carry around Firefox, Sunbird, and Thunderbird.
Integration is sweet. Stop the hating.
Re:uhhh (Score:2)
Integration sucks. Stop the crack smoking.
Re:uhhh (Score:2)
Re:uhhh (Score:2)
Sure you do, until the price/performance/convenience reality hits you. Would you pay $100 for a phone, plus $300 for an iPod, plus $200 for a still cam, plus $400 for a camcoder, plus $300 for a PDA, plus $20 for a USB keychain disk, etc etc, or $300 for one device that fits in your pocket and does all of this?
Today, you might prefer separate devices to do each of these things because the multifuction devices are all shitty at any given function.
However
Re:uhhh (Score:2)
Sure you do, until the price/performance/convenience reality hits you. Would you pay $100 for a phone, plus $300 for an iPod, plus $200 for a still cam, plus $400 for a camcoder, plus $300 for a PDA, plus $20 for a USB keychain disk, etc etc, or $300 for one device that fits in your pocket and does all of this?
You mean "and does all this poorly." It's not like a Swiss army knife; these combo phones are like a cheap, flimsy, tradeshow swag knockoff.
Re:uhhh (Score:5, Interesting)
And I don't to have to push a few buttons to get my pda/phone/camera into phone mode to make a call. Nor do I want some kiddie to hack into my pda/phone/camera and download everything about me.
I want a phone that calls people, it should be lightweight, very very tough (no 5 inch touch screen!) and not have a camera lens that I have to worry about. Nor do I want to recharge it every day. Integrated devices sacrifice in durability and longevity.
I want an ipod with many gigs of storage so that I can just grab it whatever mood I'm in, and find a suitable playlist. Integrated devices sacrifice in storage (at least right now)
I want a camera that takes good pictures and has a big honkin lens to capture lots of light for decent night time pictures. It should have a variety of features that allow me to tailor my pictures to different techniques (exposures, focus settings, etc). Integrated device sacrifice in picture quality.
You get what you pay for.
New Annoying Ring Tones (Score:5, Funny)
Re:New Annoying Ring Tones (Score:2)
Next time I see... (Score:5, Funny)
Ring Tones are the problem here! (Score:5, Insightful)
The phone companies wont let people do what we want with our phones until we stop letting them rape our wallets! $1.50 for a 32x32 pixel background image! Why cant i just send myself a custom made BG for free? Easy because stupid people pay, and they keep paying.
Change wont take long, if we all stopped buying ringtones and bullshit for our phones then change would happen pretty quick, its a broken buisness model made to screw the customers out of even more money, dont fall for it!
DRM-enabled? (Score:3, Funny)
Yeah. Hipsters. That's what I meant.
The real reason the iPodPhone should be droppped.. (Score:4, Insightful)
...is that nobody cares. Honestly, who's in the market for one of these phones? Phones have a short enough battery life.
Everyone's excited now, but wait until it ships.
Re:The real reason the iPodPhone should be dropppe (Score:3, Insightful)
Inevitable result of iPod Phone. (Score:5, Funny)
Mabel: "Henry!"
Henry: "What, dear?
Mabel: "It's one of those calls again.
Henry: "What calls, dear?"
Mabel: "Every 20 minutes or so, the phone rings and I pick it up and I hear some of that damn rock music"
Meanwhile, somewhere 5 states away, Jason is grooving down the streets, buds in ears, with one hand on the iPod phone as he hits the controls and surfs through his really impressive Led Zep collection. Every once in a while, he presses a button and the song does not change. No idea why.
Why not add a cell phone service charge? (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Why not add a cell phone service charge? (Score:2)
Ubiquitous computing (Score:3, Insightful)
I read a few weeks ago about a cell phone company in Japan working on this, and despite my reservations due to privacy concerns, I really can't wait until this kind of technology becomes widely available.
So? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:So? (Score:3, Informative)
And no, there was no updated version of the software that you could get.
Motorola should have known this (Score:5, Insightful)
I cannot understand why Apple is sodding around with Motorola on this. They should have partnered with Nokia.
As an aside, Apple should also partner with Shazam [shazam.com]. The best thing that an iPod/phone combo could do is recognize music from an online database and buy it for you.
Re:Motorola should have known this (Score:3, Interesting)
Think from a design/marketing point of view.
I know you've been thinking about Motorola's M3 razor or whatever that damn thing i don't need but severly want is.
Re:Motorola should have known this (Score:5, Interesting)
I cannot understand why Apple is sodding around with Motorola on this. They should have partnered with Nokia.
I couldn't agree more. My Nokia ended up breaking after about four years, and I ended up getting a Motorola. I've regretted every minute of it. Whereas Nokia seems to have a smiliar mindset to that of Apple (a focus on usability), my Motorola is the most unusable piece of crap I've ever had the displeasure of dealing with.
I can store something like five minutes of voice on the cell phone, but I'll be damned if it runs out of space with twenty text messages. You can't turn the volume off without making more noise. Even when the volume is off, some buttons still make noise (and are conveniently on the outside of the phone, so it can beep in your pocket) making the vibrate feature nearly useless. The "Accept" and "Cancel" buttons are on different sides at different times. The dial and hangup buttons are permanently juxtaposed. The "Memory Meter" shows you a representation of how much memory is left on the phone, but you have no way of telling whether or not a full bar means it's full of space or filled up. Assigning a one-touch dial number to contacts is a pain in the ass. The power connector features two microscopic hooks which are so easy to break it's unbelievable. The phone takes five minutes after "booting" before I can place a call, view my contact list, check messages, etc. Switching the phone to "Silent" or "Vibrate" does not necessarily turn the volume off.
I swear to god if I ever meet the man who designed this worthless piece of shit, I am going to bludgeon him with a tractor.
Re:Motorola should have known this (Score:3, Interesting)
Apple has had a partnership with Motorolla for over 20 years on the Macintosh. Right now it looks like they're going to be getting their chips from IBM for the foreseeable future, so they have to do something to stay good business partners with Motorolla in case Motorolla comes up with something good again (like they did with Altivec). Nokia is a competitor to Motorolla. It is a BAD idea to partner with your partner's competitor.
Th
We need to change this (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:We need to change this (Score:3, Interesting)
Of course - and this is the part you won't like - you'll have to pay full price for the phone. But that's fair - if Cingular doesn't like a particular phone then why should they pay more than half the price of it for you?
Darn - it would be convenient if this was a "big nasty corporation vs little guy" story. But it's just an "
uh, me for one. (Score:5, Insightful)
Does anybody else not understand the question? Is this guy saying I'd rather carry two gizmos than one because, I'd have, like, more stuff?
Re:uh, me for one. (Score:2)
Yeah, I was thinking "What does this guy research? Climate change?".
Ever hear of a "Smart Phone" Mr Hart? It's where they combine a phone, and a PDA and charge the customer 500$ for it.
I'm am truely astonished at how some people can keep their jobs.
Exclusive Slashdot Interview, take 2. (Score:2, Funny)
SJ: It will change the iPod as we know it.
SJ: It is never enough.
SJ: Hold on a sec...(whips small white device out of pocket, attaches 103-key USB keyboard ). It's the latest device in the iPod family.
Motorola (Score:3, Insightful)
So Buy a Carrier (Score:3, Funny)
RP
this is good. (Score:2, Informative)
And with Bluetooth or WiFi, just sync your tunes from your desktop. There only needs to be one repository for your music, not many--and having iTunes on a phone seems a bit self defeating in that scenario. As for downloading, I rather download at home--when I'm not on the go. When I'm 'mobile' I rather be listening to my tunes than buying, surfing
they are missing the point (Score:2)
I for one would be worried to d
Just a thought (Score:2, Interesting)
Cell phones and mp3 players aren't exactly a match made in heaven. One is used to talk to people, the other is used to AVOID talking to people. :)
So ya, imho, stick to your iPod (or, if you're *really* cool, iRiver) for music, and whatever you prefer for a cell phone.
not needed (Score:2)
What a deal! (Score:2)
If they throw in the dog bark translator [inq7.net] I'll buy two! No, make that three!
When is the useless feature creep in cell phones going to stop, and the research on actually making the batteries last longer going to start?
Covergence != Profits (Score:2)
Telco Cartel Hates its Customers (Score:5, Insightful)
"Verizon, Cingular, and other wireless operators want customers to pay to put music on phones. They think getting a full song should be like getting a ring tone, snippets for which customers now pay from 99 to $3."
So the mobile carriers are screwing us, because they think they can force us to pay the phone company to put music we already own onto phones that we own. They have absolutely nothing to do with this transaction, except that they can force the phone maker to skip the feature. They don't even have the usual fake cartel argument that this transaction between you, the phone and the copyright holder somehow competes "unfairly" with anything they're trying to sell. No, it's just greed and monopoly, pure and simple.
The carriers are also stopping Palm from putting Bluetooth and WiFi support either into the phones, or in the SDIO slot specs. Because that could somehow allow unlimited use of your phone with your network, which conflicts with their plans to make you pay for every bit transacted. These people are standing in the way of the entire telecom future, as if the RBOCs stood at the gates of the Internet in 1990, forcing PC makers to cripple motherboards to pay the RBOCs for every bit transacted, over a modem or otherwise. The sooner they're destroyed, the better.
Other manufacturers to the rescue... (Score:3, Interesting)
We've heard from all the major manufacturers where next-generation MP3 phones are concerned except Nokia, who just so happens to have a publicly announced contract with Loudeye. Loudeye, in turn, has signed a deal to provide a music store to O2. Read the press releases these companies have put out in the past few months and connect the dots here, people! The fact that the most powerful mobile phone manufacturer in the world isn't saying much probably means that it's coming to the party with sleeves full of aces!
Samsung is already on its second generation hard drive MP3 phone. The first was an unmitigated disaster and the second's not too bad! You can bet that the third will be a winner.
The world will move forward without Apple and Motorola.
This Phone was So Lame anyway (Score:3, Funny)
Here's what would be more irresistable (Score:5, Insightful)
A device combining the digital music prowess of Apple, the user interface design of Apple, the build quality of Apple, and the wireless expertise of Nokia.
Frankly, Motorola's user interface is a hideous piece of crap that doesn't seem to have improved since the 80s: menus that SHOUT AT YOU, and a phone book that still can't cope with people having more than one phone number (duh!). No matter how good the RAZR looks, it's the same craptastic software on it, and that's why I'm not gonna touch it.
Worst.. (Score:5, Funny)
Worst.. pun... ever.
(well someone had to say it... and at 200+ posts it was looking dangerously like they wouldn't)
"Wireless expertise" my @55. (Score:4, Informative)
Some bugs with the actual software of the phone...
Physical defects and horrible design.
Nickel-and-diming by Motorola/Nextel: Want to use a cradle? Better get a different power supply, since the one that comes with the phone will be rejected. Service issues: Nextel has got to be the only vell provider with 100% reception in the middle of a freaking corn field (Illinois Math and Sci Academy, Aurora, IL) and 0% reception in the middle of a bustling metropolis. (Chicago, IL).
As a Moto V710 "user" (Score:3, Interesting)
I wouldn't blame apple (Score:3, Interesting)
Svelte is good, features are good, but they're worthless without stability.
RTFA (Score:2)
Re:Why?! (Score:2, Insightful)
Being a student at the University, I move around a lot during the day between libraries, classes, and gyms, and having an mp3 player during the day would be great, but I've already got my phone in one pocket, keys in the other, and wallet in the back.
Re:Why?! (Score:2)
"Lug" around another device? Isn't that a little over the top? You make it sound like we're talking about carrying a spare boat anchor.
Being a student at the University, I move around a lot during the day between libraries, classes, and gyms, and having an mp3 player during the day would be great, but I've already got my phone in one pocket, keys in the other, and w
Re:Why?! (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Why?! (Score:3, Insightful)
I already carry my cell phone with me, it would be nice if I didn't have to carry a second device but had the ability to listen to mp3's when I felt like it. Is that really so difficult to fathom? Lets move on.
Re:FUCK YOU APPLEDOT (Score:2)
It is kinda sad the editors didn't take the stock symbol out, but its sadder the submitter didn't.
Re:FUCK YOU APPLEDOT (Score:2)
Re:Whata ya wanna bet (Score:2)