Comments on: T-Mobile to launch open development platform to challenge iPhone
Wireless carrier will encourage development on all of its phone platforms.
Wireless carrier will encourage development on all of its phone platforms.
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For the past 5 years company after company has failed spectacularly in their question to copy Apple while using inferior tools. Zune is only the latest example. You can't beat Apple by copying them. You've got to leapfrog them and do something different and better. If they don't, expect history to repeat itself.
If Sprint gives me the option of slapping Android on my Instinct, I will do that in a heartbeat.
So this is not about a phone as a rock solid OS built into every product, a business model that works and software that does what is say's it will.
However, it needs a change of clothes to dress up the operating system and to tweek its interface.
What is interesting is that Nokia Labs is currently beta testing push e-mail a la Blackberry (http://www.nokia.com/betalabs/email) while also being soon to release a Touch screen phone. If Nokia adds eye candy to its stable and most used operating system, while nurturing third party developers, it will stay the heavy weight. Looking at the interface of its push e-mail software, one cannot help but see promise that the giant can still dance.
I think this plan is more wishful thinking than a real plan
It will be VERY hard for T-Mobile to capture lightning in a bottle. However, this is a step forward for them - and an admission that the iPhone is making an impact on other carriers.
- by gerrrg August 12, 2008 9:32 PM PDT
- There is no "G-Phone". What's up with people continuing to misunderstand what Android is?
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