It was Apple and Google--not the traditional phone companies AT&T and Verizon Communications--that took center stage in the telephony market in 2007.
In January, Apple announced the iPhone and named AT&T its exclusive carrier in the U.S. For almost six months, anticipation and hype surrounding the iPhone grew into a frenzy until the June 30 launch.
With an innovative touch screen that allows people to shrink and magnify Web pages with the pinch of their fingers, the iPhone has set the bar for future mobile devices in terms of usability, functionality, and design.
But the iPhone wasn't without problems. Some users initially had trouble signing up for service. And then there was the $200 price cut a few months after the product debuted that left many early adopters seething. By far the biggest complaint has been about the 2.5G data network the iPhone uses. Many iPhone users say it is painfully slow when it comes to accessing e-mail or surfing the Web.
In addition to Apple, Google also made headlines in the mobile market. Early in the year, Google joined the debate over rules for the Federal Communication Commission's upcoming 700MHz spectrum auction. The auction, which is set to begin January 24, reallocates wireless spectrum licenses that have been used to deliver analog TV. This spectrum is viewed as the industry's best hope to usher in a new era of wireless broadband service.
Google was instrumental in getting the FCC to adopt auction rules that would ultimately give consumers more choice in the devices they use on these new networks. And in November, Google CEO Eric Schmidt committed the company to bidding in the auction, promising to spend at least $4.6 billion on licenses.
Exactly what Google plans to do with the spectrum if it wins licenses is still unknown. But its participation raises the stakes, especially for traditional telephony players.
Getting into the spectrum auction wasn't the only wireless initiative Google was cooking up in 2007. Soon after the iPhone launch, rumors of a Google phone surfaced. And in October, Google revealed not a phone, but a new mobile operating system that could be used by handset makers and mobile-phone operators.
This new software, coupled with its own wireless network, would not only give Google the ability to put its brand on millions of mobile devices, it would allow the company to control the Internet experience on these devices. In a nutshell, Google could determine the next-generation wireless network.
This is a huge change not only for Google, but the entire wireless industry. From the beginning, carriers have controlled every aspect of the wireless experience. In the U.S. market, carriers determine which phones can be used on their networks and even which features will be enabled. And they decide which software or applications can be accessed. Depending on what happens with the spectrum auction and how Google's software initiative fares, the company could become a major player in telecommunications in the next several years.
To be fair, moves by Apple and Google in 2007 haven't revolutionized the wireless phone market just yet. AT&T and Verizon Wireless are still the dominant carriers. And Nokia is still the No. 1 mobile-phone maker. But change is on the horizon, and small steps are already being taken. Only a few weeks ago, Verizon said it would open up restrictions on devices that could access its network.
In the final analysis, 2007 was just the beginning, which only heightens anticipation for what's to come in 2008 and beyond.
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Handset makers in the U.S. are dabbling in selling phones directly to consumers, but will the model be attractive enough to consumers?
The Federal Communications Commission will unveil some of the rules it will use in the upcoming 700MHz spectrum auction.
AT&T competitors could take a hit in the next few quarters as enthusiastic Apple fans switch providers for the hyped device.
Allowing consumers to mix and match wireless gadgets and service providers could spark innovation--and compromise security.
Mobile is the next frontier for Google, but how will it straddle the line between partnering and competing with major cell phone operators?
Some critics argue the commissioners should have gone further and others say they should have let market forces prevail.
Chris Sacca, head of special initiatives, talks about the company's plans for the upcoming 700MHz spectrum auction.
Even as EarthLink is scaling back deployments, some cities and regional networks are pushing forward with plans to build citywide Wi-Fi networks.
Sprint Nextel's ousted CEO may not be the only casualty as unhappy investors pressure the company to dump plans for a next-generation network.
Experts see Google partnering with a handset maker for bundled software that will enable everything from IM and maps to monitoring blood pressure.
Analysts expect Google to launch a Google phone now that it has an alliance of supporters behind its Android mobile platform.
Company's decision to open network to different devices and applications means it will have to give up iron-fisted control of its network.
If Google wins the 700MHz wireless spectrum auction in January, expect Google-branded phones galore.
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Bringing smart phones to the masses
don't want to switch carriers. Why the exclusivity? Wouldn't Apple
make tons more making it for several carriers or is the money
Apple gets from AT&T that great? T-Mo doesn't get the new
devices so I have to buy them unlocked on eBay.... sucks
As for RIM Blackberry
"Revenue for the third quarter of fiscal 2008 was $1.67 billion, up 22% from $1.37 billion in the previous quarter and up 100% from $835.1 million in the same quarter of last year.... Approximately 1.65 million BlackBerry(R) subscriber accounts were added in the quarter and over 3.9 million devices were shipped. The total BlackBerry subscriber account base at the end of the third quarter was approximately 12 million."
iPhone is BRAND NEW, it's a 1.0 version, and it sold remarkably
well considering it isn't an established mobil phone maker at all!
Nokia and RIM make mobil phones - that's all they make. Apple,
Inc. has added handheld computers (the iPhone runs OS X
operating system) to it's product mix.
Hello, are you guys nuts? I don't know if I speak for all cell phone owners, but I do speak for myself. I don't want Google, or anyone else using my cell phone as a vehicle for ads. PERIOD.
-Alex Alexzander
Your cell phone is tied to all of that personal information, and Android's purpose is to collect personal information for advertising purposes.
open spectrum. I suppose in an age where you can be in beta for
years, announcing is doing.