Archive for the ‘iphone’ Category

Apple Grabs 25% of the Smartphone Market, Android Doubles Market Share

February 16, 2010

comScore has released a report on the state of the US mobile market from September to December 2009, and it shows that the recently established trends of Android and iPhone growth don’t show signs of ceasing.
In December 2009 RIM was still the leading mobile smartphone operating system in the U.S., with 41.6% market share, a slight drop from 42.6% from September 2009. Apple has risen from 24.1% to 25.3% in that same period, and Google, although still in the fifth place, has doubled its market share – from 2.5% to 5.2%.


Microsoft lost one percentage point and dropped to 18% share, but the biggest loser of the bunch was Palm, which dropped from 8.3% to 6.1%, despite recent price cuts which made their smartphones one of the cheapest on the market. If Palm doesn’t do something to reverse this trend, it may soon be looking at the back of Android, which is growing like a weed, both in the US and internationally.

Cooperative Mobility

February 4, 2010
IT can’t do it alone.  Smartphones are coming in from all directions, many times driven by end-users.  And I haven’t seen many IT departments in 2009 flush with new resources to handle this influx as well as they would wish.  Employees need to share the responsibility with IT to manage security, cost, and mobile apps.  Think of it as self-governance guided by IT policy.

The basic notion of Cooperative Mobility is that most users want to do the right thing but don’t have the data or the tools to always make the right decision.  Cost control is a good example.  Everyone has their horror story of the $5,000 international roaming bill.  Usually it’s not voice – it’s data, because the user just didn’t know how much data traffic email and browsing actually generates.  In almost all instances, real-time visibility would have dramatically cut usage.

But which behaviors can be realistically changed and which require tighter control from IT?  And what is the cost trade-off?  If the premise of Cooperative Mobility is correct, striking that balance will reduce IT costs, scale IT effectiveness and actually increase user satisfaction by pushing more visibility and control to the perimeter.

MobileIron’s Smart@Work delivers Cooperative Mobility

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The Apple tablet device is a computer, not a phone (we think…)

January 27, 2010

As most of you will already know, Mr Jobs is due to announce a new gadget today which is strongly rumoured to be a tablet based device with all of the connectivity the iPhone delivers using a 7-10″ touch screen.

Strong intel suggests the device will be running iPhones OS version 3.2. if this is the case, then MobileIron‘s iPhone Device Management platform should support the tablet easily.

If the tablet is real and the device is a grown up (in size) iPhone then many Enterprise clients will see it as a natural alternative to bulky laptops and fiddly netbooks. With MobileIron, securing, controling and managing them will be a breeze.

The event begins @ 17:00 UK time with the big pitch starting @ 18:00. I, for one, want one already. Do you ?

If you’d like to know more about MobileIron, take a look at Cloud Distribution’s web site – http://www.cloud-distribution.com/mobileiron/

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Apple responsible for 99.4% of mobile app sales in 2009 (Updated)

January 21, 2010

The latest report from market research firm Gartner suggests that mobile apps are big business, and that business should only grow in the next few years. According to Gartner’s numbers and those reported by Apple, Apple completely owns this market, likely grabbing almost every one of the 4.2 billion dollars spent on mobile apps in 2009. Based on Gartner’s estimates and our own analysis, Apple could hold on to at least two-thirds of the market if current sales trends hold for 2010.

Apple first opened the App Store in July 2008, along with the launch of the iPhone 3G and the release of iPhone OS 2.0. Sales were brisk, with 300 million apps sold by December. After the holidays, that number had jumped to 500 million. Earlier this month, Apple announced that sales had topped 3 billion; that means iPhone users downloaded 2.5 billion apps in 2009 alone. Gartner’s figures show another 16 million apps that could come from other platform’s recently opened app stores, giving Apple at least 99.4 percent of all mobile apps sold for the year.

Need to manage the iPhone in an Enterprise environment ? Take a look at MobileIron – http://www.cloud-distribution.com/iphonedevicemanagement/

Vodafone Sells 50,000 iPhones in First 24 Hours

January 20, 2010

Vodafone, the fourth carrier in the UK to get the iPhone, had an impressive first day of sales, unloading more than 50,000 iPhones on Thursday alone according to The Independent. To put that in perspective, Vodafone sold 30,000 more iPhones in a single day than Google sold Nexus Ones in a full week.

What’s perhaps most interesting about the news is that in the UK the iPhone is already sold by Orange, O2 (whose exclusive deal with Apple expired at the end of 2009), and Tesco. In fact, Vodafone actually out sold Orange by a ratio of 5:3 for the first 24 hour period.

The Independent writes:

“There had been fears the group would see customers move to rival operators as a result. However, one company insider said: “When we didn’t get the iPhone initially, everyone predicted that customers would leave. These sales figures have proved that wrong.”
This came despite Vodafone offering customers the device on a similar tariff to Orange and O2, scotching talk that a bitter price war was set to break out. Both Orange and Vodafone have instead looked to sell the phone off the strength of their networks. Mr Laurence reiterated yesterday that the “exceptional demand” had been driven by the strength of the company’s network.”

If anything, Vodafone’s initial success with the iPhone clearly demonstrates that each additional carrier matters to Apple’s bottom-line, and may even serve as a bit of foreshadowing for the day that Verizon gets the iPhone in the United States.

Tesco sparks iPhone price war with £20 a month contract

December 10, 2009

An iPhone price war has been triggered with news Tesco is to sell the iconic device on a £20 a month contract. Theentry of Tesco into the iPhone market means that the cheapest way ofbuying and running one amounts to £462 with a one year contract. This is made up of £222 for one of the original 3G models with an 8GB memory and 12 monthly payments of £20.

Over 18 months, the figure would be  £582, which is some £43 cheaper than the equivalent deals from current iPhone providers. Thesupermarket is taking on established mobile phone networks, Orange andO2, in the battle for sales in the crucial Christmas trading period. The pressure to cut prices will be turned up in the new year when Vodafone will also start offering the iPhone. Currently,both Orange and O2 insist on customers signing up for a minimum 18months for those who buy the iPhone on a contract basis.

Thismeans the cheapest way of buying and running an iPhone 3G works out at£624.98 with Orange. That is a handset price of £96.50 and a monthlycharge of £29.36. The price with O2, which originally hadexclusive rights to sell the iPhone when it was first launched inNovember 2007, works out at  £625.73 for a similar deal.

Mobilephone handset prices and tariffs are notoriously complex, which meansmaking a like for like comparison is virtually impossible for consumers.

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Tesco to offer iPhone in the UK

November 30, 2009
iPhone
Supermarket giant Tesco has joined a growing number of UK firms offering Apple’s popular iPhone.

A spokesperson for the firm said that it hoped to offer the phone “in time for Christmas”. Although Tesco has not revealed tariffs, the spokesperson said that its prices were “competitive”. In September, it was revealed that O2 had lost its exclusive deal to sell the phone, which had been in place since its launch in 2007. Both Vodafone and Orange have signed deals to sell the phone.

Orange has already begun selling the touchscreen whilst Vodafone will offer it from early 2010. Orange said it had sold more than 30,000 handsets on its first day. Tesco Mobile is a joint venture with O2. It offers phones on both contract and pay as you go tariffs from its stores around the UK. O2 has offered the iPhone in the UK for more than two years. Its popularity allowed the firm to win subscribers from other networks, according to analysts. Earlier this year, O2 said it had sold more than 1m of the phones. All of the firms will offer the iPhone 3G and the newer iPhone 3GS.

MobileIron voted Best in Show

November 23, 2009
MobileIron won Best in Show at Under the Radar today!  Here’s a link to the presentation we gave:  http://www.undertheradarblog.com/  I am really proud of the hard work the team has done to get us here.
It was an honor to be invited to Under the Radar.  There were some awesome mobile startups there and I learned a lot from watching what others were doing.

I thought these guys http://www.m-via.com/ were solving a fascinating challenge of money transfer from US to developing countries over the phone.  And these guys http://hopephones.org/ were collecting old phones and using them to provide better medical care in developing countries – that’s impact.

Plus I met Greg Grunberg, who plays the mind-reading cop on Heroes and is both a really nice guy and a mobile entrepreneur (http://getyowza.com/).  A cool day.

Orange sells 30,000 iPhones on first day

November 16, 2009
Orange sells 30,000 iPhones on first day

Mobile phone company breaks O2’s two-year exclusive grip on the Apple handset in the UK Orange sold more than 30,000 iPhones within hours of becoming the first network to break O2’s two-year exclusive grip on the Apple handset in the UK.

The mobile phone company, which lost out to O2 on the original deal at the last minute, reckons the level of sales reached by 4pm is a new first-day record for a British mobile phone launch. As well as the network’s own shops, the device is being sold through independent retailers Carphone Warehouse and Phones4U. Coincidentally the latter today launched a rather eye-catching and potentially controversial new festive look for its website.

Nestled alongside the latest handset deals, is a dishevelled-looking cartoon Santa Claus with his Y-fronts around his knees, urinating against the Phones4U logo. On another part of the site, Santa can be seen smoking a cigarette surrounded by what appear to be beer cans.

The screens of the handsets shown on the site as “the hottest phones at the coolest prices”, meanwhile, depict scenes including a fight between two snowmen, which appears to culminate in decapitation, garrotted turkeys and Rudolph the Red Nose Reindeer’s severed head.

“In keeping with the rest of our ‘Great Deals 4 Popular People’ advertising campaign we have decided to use some tongue-in-cheek and light-hearted imagery on our website and in our stores to support our seasonal promotions this year,” said a Phones4U spokesman.

“This imagery will continue to change throughout the campaign to keep it fresh and interesting. The aim of the campaign is to engage with our target audience of 16 to 24-year-olds and reinforce our unique tone of voice through fun, anti-kitsch advertising that challenges the stereotypical portrayal of the holidays you see on the high street.”

In contrast, the launch of the iPhone on Orange is being backed by a far more sober multimillion pound advertising campaign by the network, which is owned by France Telecom. Rather than focus on price Orange is basing its attempt to lure customers onto its network on the promise that it has better coverage than any of its rivals. In fact there is hardly any difference between the cost of the iPhone on Orange and the existing cost of the device with O2.

Vodafone will also be selling the device in the UK, but not until the start of next year. Speaking after the company’s first-half results on Tuesday, however, Vodafone’s chief executive Vittorio Colao refused to say whether the business will undercut its rivals in the race to attract British iPhone users. “You don’t expect me to tell you two months in advance what we will do in the UK,” he said. “The only thing I can tell you is if Orange customers are unhappy they can go into red shops.”

World’s first iPhone virus changes your wallpaper… to a picture of Rick Astley, hacker claims

November 10, 2009

Any iPhone estate should investigate http://www.mobileiron.comhttp://www.cloud-distribution.com/mobileiron/ to ensure their iPhone’s are protected from this security risk.A 21-year-old Australian claims to be the first hacker in the world to infect the iPhone with a virus.It spreads between phones with each call but the damage extends to changing the device’s wallpaper – to a photo of Eighties pop star Rick Astley famous for his hit Never Gonna Give You Up.Sydney student Ashley Towns said he wanted to raise the issue of security, adding: ‘What I’ve done has shown that anyone can easily hack into an iPhone.’iphonerickAttack: The virus infects iPhones with a picture of 80s pop star Rick AstleyHe added: ‘The virus pretty much exploits people’s laziness in not changing their password.’Rick Astley is a popular choice for mischievous computer users.Video-sharing website YouTube has spawned the phenomenon of ‘Rickrolling’, where a person provides a weblink to an innocent-looking topic but this actually takes the user to a video of Rick Astley singing ‘Never Gonna Give You Up.’Mr Towns’ virus can only infect iPhones which have been ‘jailbroken’ by their owners – an action that allows phone owners to install applications on their phones which have not been approved by Apple.Telecommunication experts warn that jailbreaking phones can stir Apple’s wrath and that of telephone companies, but there have been few complaints of owners being punished by having their service discontinued.Mr Towns said that after jailbreaking their iPhones people should always change their password because all iPhones use the same password.He said that somebody with more malicious intent could have done anything – broken into a phone to read SMS messages, search through emails and view contacts and photos.’I’m unaware whether I’m breaking any laws by starting the virus,’ said Mr Towns.’I’ve been informed that I may have broken some, but not being a lawyer I don’t know.’The virus itself is not malicious and is not out to hurt people. It’s just poking fun and hopefully waking people up a little.’He is certain it’s the first virus of its kind in the world – ‘especially the first that spreads from phone to phone.’He has no idea how many people his virus has affected so far, but he knows that in the initial stages it struck around 100 iPhones.Mr Towns wants to assure users that apart from changing the wallpaper, the virus is not harmful and is quite easy to get rid of.Anyone whose iPhone is infected, he says, need take only a couple of minutes to remove the Rick Astley photo by changing the phone’s password and deleting a few files from the phone.The message, he says, is for people to change their passwords whenever they do something new on their iPhones – or the instrument could be struck with a far more dangerous virus than the one he has spread.Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-1226288/Rick-rolling-worm-hits-iPhone–virus-changes-wallpaper-picture-Rick-Astley.html?ITO=1490#ixzz0WRxKq4O3visit our website @ http://www.cloud-distribution.com