The Cell Phone Wars

Slate has an interesting comparison of Apple’s very closed model with the iPhone and Google’s very open model with Android:

In the two months since the App Store's launch, Apple has rejected several programs for seemingly arbitrary reasons that it won't disclose. Developers havegrumbled about this capriciousness, but until now they've had no real alternative—iPhone and iPod Touch owners have already downloaded 100 million apps through the App Store, making Apple the Wal-Mart of mobile software.

And then along came Sergey Brin and Larry Page. On Tuesday, the Google founders unveiled the G1, the first phone based on Google's new mobile operating system, Android. The phone, which will go on sale in late October, is manufactured by the Taiwanese company HTC and is being offered exclusively through T-Mobile, but Google's software will soon make its way to other phones and other carriers across the globe. Google says that Android embodies principles of "radical openness." Unlike Apple, the company will let developers create any mobile apps they please. Google has also persuaded carriers to allow users to run any apps they like—including voice-over-IP software like Skype, which carriers have traditionally resisted because it lets you make calls without running up cellular minutes.

Watching Google and Apple carve out space in the mobile business, one can hardly avoid thinking that history is repeating itself. In the 1970s and '80s, Apple created the first great personal computers. But because Apple closed its platform, it was IBM, Dell, HP, and especially Microsoft that reaped the benefits of Apple's innovations. The Mac's operating system ran only on Mac computers; Windows ran on lots of lots of different companies' hardware. This made non-Apple computers both cheaper than Apple's machines—competition between hardware manufacturers pushed down prices—and more useful, as third-party developers flocked to write must-have programs for Windows. Apple seems to be following a similar restrictive strategy with the iPhone.

Google's Android OS is "open" in two distinct ways. First, Google has released the software under an open-source license, allowing hardware manufacturers to customize Android for different phones. Second, Android is open to third-party apps; Google and the carriers will make sure that apps do not violate the law or harm people's phones, but other than that, they promise to impose few restrictions.

There's [nothing] defensible about Apple's rejections of iPhone apps. It got rid of I Am Rich, a $1,000 program that did nothing, and Pull My Finger, a fart-joke app, for "limited utility"—which would be understandable if so many iPhone Apps weren't pretty limited. (How did Apple decide that a program that turns your phone into a flashlight is more useful than a program that turns your phone into a whoopee cushion?) Apple also rejected a comic book app called Murderdrome because its contents were too violent—even though it offers extremely violent movies in the iTunes Store. And it blocked an e-mail client because it competed with the iPhone's built-in e-mail app, a transparently anti-competitive move.

Apple seems to be pursuing a strategy of just-open-enough—permissive enough to keep programmers writing code and to keep customers buying software but still locked-down enough to let Apple control the platform's larger direction.

It’s hard for me to defend Apple on this one, mostly because they’re not being transparent about what is and is not allowed. And the anticompetitive nature of not allowing a third party email application should be obvious to anyone, even the iCabal. That’s just not right, no matter what your concerns are. I certainly don’t want to be locked into Apple’s disastrous MobileMe/Mail.app/iTunes system. Who would?

The Android platform, of course, is interesting specifically because there are no restrictions. It’s even doubly interesting to me personally because I happen to use a lot of Google services, but let’s be honest here: Android will be a better platform for all non-Apple services, specifically because Google won’t move to block a Hotmail-compatible native email application like Apple will, or whatever.

Of course, this is all slice-in-time stuff. I’m not switching to T-Mobile just to get a G1. But I do see an Android phone in m future, unless Apple-or Microsoft—wakes up and does this right thing.

Discuss this Article 90

panache1023
on Sep 26, 2008
The real problem with Mike Galos is that he is a hypocrite and says things like "people who change the world"... Sure, MS has changed the world, but have all their changes been for the BETTER? For the best? Arguably some have, and some others not. And here is a perfect quote to prove how dark Mike Galos's blinders really are... "This is wrong, but remember the time we heard a rumor that MS did that? That was even worse. Well, it would have been if the accusations had turned out to actually have been true, but still..." How many *RUMORS* and *ACCUSATIONS* of illegal activity by MS have there been, and how many of them have been PROVEN in COURT? How many times did MS settle cases so they wouldn't go to court? PLEASE! Hell, Im not a fan of Apple's AppStore restrictions, but Mike Galos, it's time to get off your MS pedestal, and stop acting like MS is god's gift to the computing world...It's actually kind of pathetic how see through you are.
Waethorn
on Sep 26, 2008
"Sure, MS has changed the world, but have all their changes been for the BETTER?" Without Microsoft, you wouldn't be using that free web browser that you're using right now to try and debunk their previous business practises.
shark47
on Sep 26, 2008
RE: this witch hunt against Mike, I would have to agree with doc (and his Steeler's example) here. Mike is pro-MS (and for good reason), not anti-Apple. If you're looking for an example of anti-anything, chuck is a good one. He's the one who goes about making statements like, "I hate MS." Mike thinks MS is God's gift but there are many who think it's the scum of the earth.
panache1023
on Sep 26, 2008
Waethorn... Like I said, not all of what MS has done is bad, but are you taking Mike's position that EVERYTHING MS does is good, and has done NO WRONG to the point that all you want to do is bash Apple every chance you get? Remind me again why they even bothered with IE7? Was it because a small little "no one" came out of nowhere and started to grab browser market share? If MS actually cared about the browser, they would have been innovating in the browser space without having to get a kick in the pants from FireFox.... And that doesn't even matter because it wasn't the point. And not to mention for a long time the Netscape browser was a free download...waaaay before Microsoft decided to do away with them....I admit it though, I used to use IE6 until it became known how pitiful and dangerous it was to use it.
panache1023
on Sep 26, 2008
Shark. Mike is definitely pro-MS..which is fine. It's his ridiculous anti apple stance which befuddles me, and clearly others. How can you say he is not anti apple when he claims that things Apple are doing now are so bad (and most of them are), and then goes on to say that the bad things MS has done are "RUMOR" or "ACCUSATIONS" that haven't been proven?!
tayme
on Sep 26, 2008
@Waethorn - "Oh, and you're good at math too." As a matter of fact, I am...lets see; 25+ years as a Republican...hmmm, that has nothing to do with my age...but on the other hand, I am nearly 50 years old and 50 * 160 = 8000. Thus, your comment about me being 1/160th the age of the earth tells me that you believe that the earth is ~8000 years old. Or, was it some snide comment about being a Republican meaning that I automagically do not believe in evolution or the big bang theory? As you said... --tayme
tayme
on Sep 26, 2008
For the record...I don't know how the earth was formed, I wasn't there...but I am sure that it didn't involve Microsoft or Apple. Mike, care to correct me on that? ;-) Have a nice weekend. --tayme
WebGuy3000
on Sep 26, 2008
Actually, the universe began as a side project in Microsoft Research Labs, codenamed Big_Bang, back in the early eighties...
gorath
on Sep 26, 2008
of course, WebGuy is refering to the original 80s, when year numbers consisted of only two digits :p
mikegalos@msn.com
on Sep 26, 2008
Shark I'm sure they'd rather talk about me than discuss Apple these days. It's not a fun time to be in the iCabal...
DRWAM
on Sep 26, 2008
Mike, they're probably bald and are jealous of your hair.
Waethorn
on Sep 26, 2008
"It's not a fun time to be in the iCabal..." ....or a Republican. http://video.msn.com/video.aspx?mkt=en-CA&brand=sympatico&vid=0fb197de-8... ....sooooo funny, and yet sooooo true!
tayme
on Sep 26, 2008
@Mike - Not sure why you think I am in the iCabal...I consider myself an overall fan of technology. But, once again...you avoid answering any questions directly. Here is a direct and serious question...and I asked it earlier in this thread...do you feel that the hours that you spend on Paul's site, posting what you consider to be the only true facts, worthwhile? If so, could you explain why? @Doc - Naw...I'm not bald at all, but my hairstyle has changed since the 1970s. @Waethorn - Why so concerned about United States politics? Planning to come down for some real, quality, competition based healthcare instead of that socialized joke of a system up north? @Sharky - I hope that you are joking when you say that you don't recognize the anti-Apple, or actually, anti anything except Microsoft, bias of Mike's posts. --tayme
Waethorn
on Sep 26, 2008
"Why so concerned about United States politics? Planning to come down for some real, quality, competition based healthcare instead of that socialized joke of a system up north?" There's a reason why people get extra Canadian health insurance before making day trips to the US, and it's not because of "quality" or "competition". ....Since when was health care considered a competitive industry, anyway? (Doc? Care to comment?) tayme, you're right! You ARE a Republican. Sad, just sad.
DRWAM
on Sep 26, 2008
Me-ow! I'm telling your mom what you said, tayme! Doc PS, where did you find my picture?
LC21
on Sep 26, 2008
It's not a fun time to be in the iCabal... Oh, but it is. OSX is great, I can run Windows if I want, Apple stock is still strong, Apple has new hardware coming, and Seinfeld is laughing all the way to the bank.
tayme
on Sep 26, 2008
Healthcare non-competitive? I believe that Doc should speak on that...wait, he already did. Read through his posts here - http://community.winsupersite.com/blogs/paul/archive/2008/09/19/77743.as... Healthcare non-competitive? Is that why so many people from around the world, including the leaders of many countries come here to visit the Mayo Clinics or Johns Hopkins? Anyway...you are a smart guy...you are just biased. and thats ok. Eventually, we all grow up and learn that there is more to the world than just our own beliefs. --tayme
tayme
on Sep 26, 2008
@Doc...you sound like a cat! --tayme
mikegalos@msn.com
on Sep 26, 2008
Funny how the topic seems to keep being pushed off topic.
tayme
on Sep 26, 2008
Funny how Mike's first post started of with "Before moving on to the main topic, I would warn people not to take the "history" presented in the article as accurate." thus, immediately taking the topic off course. --tayme
tayme
on Sep 26, 2008
Funny how Mike still hasn't answered the direct question that was posed. --tayme
tayme
on Sep 26, 2008
Funny how Mike will twist and turn any story into an anti-Apple rant. Also funny how drylight does the same thing with anti-Microsoft rederick. --tayme
Waethorn
on Sep 26, 2008
The word is "rhetoric". That's twice that you spelled that wrong. When a word keeps appearing in your daily vocabulary, you should learn to spell it correctly before using it.
DRWAM
on Sep 26, 2008
OK, I'll stick with tech notes, but there is good and bad to each system, I just prefer ours bot wish we would insure everyone, lower cost, which makes all salaries par since you now get paid for indigent, but less for FFS, so salary is unchanged. The throw out all the lawyers [malpractice is also much different in Canada, and get digital hospitals to remove at least 50% of medical errors [discussed before]. But they could pay me to run it. Patient data in the cloud, accessible to even the patient and instantly to any doc for referrals. Computer order entry to reduce medication errors [the cause of 50% of all fatal medical errors]. Much more involving tech but for another forum, and I become the Surgeon General! [I look very dashing in a lab coat]
tayme
on Sep 26, 2008
Oh, so now you want me to start looking up your spelling errors? I thought that you didn't like "lotsamystuff". By the way...did you read Docs post yet? --tayme
tayme
on Sep 26, 2008
Hey, LotsaWaethorn...I think that there are spelling errors in Docs post... --tayme
tayme
on Sep 26, 2008
Go Tony Stewart!!! --tayme
shark47
on Sep 26, 2008
Pah. It was more fun discussing ergonomic mice with mommy. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cNkp4QF3we8 That should get his/her attention.
subzerohitman721
on Sep 26, 2008
(Nods my head over the ridiculous rants.) Back to the subject at hand, The Cell Phone Wars. I will not be partaking of either Apple's or Android's new phone, because I've already decided on my next phone. The Instinct, from Samsung on Sprint's network. Many of the Instinct owners I've seen have been more than satisfied with what Samsung has done with that phone. Sprint is pushing it quite heavily and I see no reason to go with nationwide 2G service (AT&T) or T-Mobile. Seeing my friends experience with T-Mobile, I'll pass. A lot of my friends had T-Mobile and got crappy phones with crappy service. Dropped calls, bad customer service, and for frustration than actual service. Then again, there's AT&T with the we'll charge you up the yin yang for the iPhone with our great 2G service and our virutally non-existent 3G coverage. I have zero incentive to participate in this war. Let T-Mobile and AT&T go to war with each other. This is one fight I'll just heat up the popcorn and enjoy. Even some iPhone owners here in Dallas have not switched because they cannot justify the prices. The Apple has been running things, we might as well add a "Soft" to their name. History is repeating itself. AppleSoft is repeating history. Either Jobs gets fired again or he crokes, whichever comes first. Have you seen the beating of their stock? Now the ficticious economic crisis that I said a few months back, has now come to fruition. Many banks gone, others in danger, already more on unemployment benefits, and oil can't make up its mind. Up, down, sideways, and gas shortages in the U.S. That leave no money for new Macs, just like I said. 40% below the previous quarter. Steve Jobs is good, I'll give him that. But success is a menace to him, I'm not sure he knows how to manage that. I'm pretty sure I am going to be lambasted on a few things, but its just my opinion. Its nice to know that quite a number of my predictions came out right. Oh, and for the Dallas native in me.... HOW BOUT THEM COWBOYS!
scoobyclub
on Sep 26, 2008
I believe Jobs has mellowed but he clearly he has a clear and distinct vision which he is pursuing and that upsets some people. Do I admire him, yes. Would I like to have dinner with him, probably. Would I like to work for him, probably not. On the MG subject of bring the software industry into disrepute I offer the following list of guilty parties, the guiltiest first. 1. The big consultancies. The likes of Accenture are the lowest of the low IMHO. They recruit cheap, untalented labour and foist it on the large companies under the marketing pretence of quality. Not blaming the troops in these companies but the practice of offering poorest value for money in any industry and straight out deception. 2. The big software makers including MS, SAP, Oracle... Constantly delivering repackaged old crap as new and fiddling the licensing to extort money for it. MS is actually the least bad of these. They also offer the poor software that allows the legions of consultants to earn an easy crust. . . . 3,123,489 The Apple App Store. No-one bar a couple of dozen me-too developers are affected. Not even on the radar in terms of giving the industry a bad name. Done for this thread!!
DRWAM
on Sep 27, 2008
Nothing ergonomic works when you click and type with a bandage on your finger. Dang cheap fluorescent light. My finger still bleeds when I bump it. You wonder when the 'new and improved' cell phones will make ergonomic claims. The variety of blue tooth ear pieces, almost none of which are comfortable, is getting a little outrageous.
bettieblu
on Sep 27, 2008
"That leave no money for new Macs, just like I said. 40% below the previous quarter." Got some links to back that up? Last quarter they were up 41% http://news.cnet.com/8301-13579_3-9995867-37.html If more banks fail and no bail out happens, panic will bring the market down and everyone will get hit and everyone will be wishing for only 40% downturns.
DRWAM
on Sep 27, 2008
So please verify, you can install Android on ANY or SOME WinMo 6.1 phone on ANY carrier? I have an iPhone, but could get an ATT [WinMo 6.1] compatible phone to play with and see how it ticks. Sorta like Sylar on Heroes. The volrath link did not explain about carriers.
shark47
on Sep 27, 2008
An ergonomic cell phone is: 1.Symmetrical 2. Flat 3. Light Wait ... Sorry, that was last year. This year, it''s 1. Symmetrical 2. Flat, with a slightly curved back (people are evolving, you know.) 3. Light Lois? Mommy? Mum? Mom? Momma? Just as an aside, you know what really grinds my gears? These new cell phones. They're so thin, they keep slipping out of my hand.
cesjr
on Sep 27, 2008
"I’m not switching to T-Mobile just to get a G1." Of course not, because then you'd have to face the reality that (1) t-mobile's 3G service is horrific compared even to AT&T and (2) Verizon and Sprint aren't offering any Android phones and very well may never - Verizon because they hate the whole idea of "open". Plus, let's be honest, some of the things Paul complains about regarding the iPhone are even worse on the G1 - lack of connections to windows contacts, calendar apps for example.
chuckb84
on Sep 27, 2008
" If you're looking for an example of anti-anything, chuck is a good one. He's the one who goes about making statements like, "I hate MS." Just to clarify, I detest their actions to restrain trade, I loathe their unwillingness to compete fairly. I deplore their strategy of bundling products to leverage one monopoly into another. Most of all, I'm appalled by their use of proprietary data formats and technologies to maintain a stranglehold on important markets, and it baffles me that anyone would EVER defend such practices. I don't hate the company per se. Paul keeps saying "They've changed". I don't think so, but I'm willing to see what happens going forward. And, I criticize the same behaviors when Apple does it; in this thread and elsewhere. Apple and Microsoft exist to make money. They don't----either of them---have the overall "good" of society as a reason for doing business. (As an aside, despite the "Don't be evil" motto, google is no different). I was actually kind of touched by Mike's comments above about why he is so riled at Apple. "Serious answer. Because this kind of deception and manipulation damages the the industry as a whole. Because this wastes developers time that could be better spent doing interesting stuff that could actually ship. Because it's just plain wrong and hurting people who are actually doing things to improve the world." Well said. I agree. I'm fine with holding Apple to that standard, SO LONG AS we do the same with Microsoft. (And, google, et al.) The only reason I posted anything on this thread was because of the comment in the original blog post, "the anticompetitive nature of not allowing a third party email application should be obvious to anyone, even the iCabal". The real point in all of this (for me, at least) is that the anticompetitive nature of what Apple is doing IS, repeat IS, totally clear to everyone. The "should be obvious to anyone, even the iCabal" line is a classic strawman argument, easily rebutted by reading the many, many Mac sites that deplore Apple's actions and agree with what Paul said. Strange that so much virtual ink has been spilled discussing something that seems to have nearly universal agreement. Usenet is not dead, after all :).
Waethorn
on Sep 27, 2008
Sharky: Doc'll like this one: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aRn5-LQCg2s
shark47
on Sep 27, 2008
"Apple's a big company. They can't behave like they did when Jobs was trying to stave off bankruptcy over a decade ago. And really, that's all this is; Corporate immaturity." "Oh, my, now that's funny. The best example I know of "corporate immaturity" is Mr. Chair-thrower" Yes, that was the same chucky. Somehow, it's OK for Apple to do "bad" things as long as the CEO doesn't throw chairs. The entire iCabal took offense when Paul compared the new Apple to the old Microsoft. How things change in ten days. Hey, I know. Let's blame it all on mike. How's that?
DRWAM
on Sep 27, 2008
Wae, that is hysterical. Also, an interesting article that says some stuff thatt you've been saying about the G1: Interview: HTC chief Florian Seiche says Google's G1 phone will kill off the PC. http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/newsbysector/mediatechnologyandteleco... Also, I FIRMLY agree about the potential waste of time by developers, as Mike suggests. I would be LIVID and out for blood if my hard work got canned for some stupid reason. I would bet that everyone else would feel the same.
anonymous
on Feb 13, 2009
Give me a break if the courts fall for apples shinanigans then we just get 1 more ruling that proves that the system is currupt my phone should be mine to use as i please.

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