Associated Press
The proliferation of new mobile-phone applications, like those available for the Apple iPhone, has convinced executives that they need to give consumers more freedom.
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Published: August 6, 2008
Updated: 08/06/2008 08:12 am
In the first 10 days after Apple opened its App Store for the iPhone, consumers downloaded more than 25 million applications, ranging from games like "Super Monkey Ball" to tools like New York City subway maps. It was nothing short of revolutionary, not only because the number was so high but also because iPhone users could do it at all.
Consumers have long been frustrated with how much control carriers - AT&T, Verizon Wireless, Sprint and the like - have exerted over what they could download to their mobile phones. But in the past nine months, carriers, software developers and cell phone makers have embraced a new attitude of openness toward consumers.
Verizon Wireless, which said in November that it would open its network to any device maker that could create a mobile phone compatible with its network, has already welcomed a few business-oriented devices. It hopes to announce new consumer phones in the coming months. When the world's largest cell phone maker, Nokia, recently took full ownership of Symbian, which owns a popular mobile operating system, it agreed to share the software with other phone makers.
More Networks Going 'Open'
The LiMo Foundation, an alliance of companies promoting a rival operating system open to makers of all wireless devices, is announcing that seven new mobile phones would use that system, bringing the number to 21.
AT&T, like Verizon, has followed suit with a promise to also open its networks.
But the pressure on AT&T is also coming from another direction: Apple, its iPhone partner. AT&T has no control over the applications downloaded to the iPhones, which AT&T offers exclusively. But the proliferation of new applications and the realization that they only make cell phones more popular has convinced executives there that they need to give consumers more freedom.
The industry, of course, has selfish reasons for promoting openness. Applications spur the use of higher-priced wireless data plans and the purchase of more expensive smartphones.
"What is most important for us is to have a customer sign up for a plan," said Ralph de la Vega, who is in charge of AT&T's wireless unit. "We think we can have multiple ways to make money."
Silicon Valley's venture capitalists are already salivating over the enthusiasm for cell phone applications. Their investments in this category rose 90 percent in the first half of 2008, to $383 million, from the second half of 2007, according to Rutberg & Co., a technology research firm in San Francisco.
Analysts and industry executives agree that Apple, a new entrant to the cell phone market, deserves credit for spurring the carriers and cell phone makers to change.
But there is something bigger at play, too. The market for smartphones, which are really handheld computers, has quickly expanded beyond business users. They have gone mainstream, with teenagers and women finding novel uses for them, texting snippets of their lives to friends or tracking friends on maps. The carriers and the handset makers realize they have to make the phones adaptable to those new customers.
"What is happening is inevitable," said Walter Piecyk, a communications analyst at Pali Research who studies the mobile phone market. "Companies can't really stop it. They might as well embrace it. Consumers are demanding these types of devices, which is good for everyone."
Of course, consumers should be careful what they wish for. Already there are at least six major operating systems for cell phones - Linux, Symbian and BlackBerry, as well as those made by Microsoft, Palm and Apple. And more are coming. Google expects the first phones in its Open Handset Alliance, which will use its Google Mobile operating system, to be out this fall. Consumers may find it confusing that some applications work only for certain phones because developers do not have the time or money to adapt projects to every operating system.
Carriers Determine Openness
Consumers will also come to realize that "open" comes with an asterisk. The word means what the carriers, handset makers and software developers want it to mean. For example, Verizon's open system is "open" only to phones it has certified. IPhone users can download only the applications Apple has approved.
Still, many developers agree that Apple is less restrictive than AT&T or Verizon.
"While the iPhone is closed, it does have the openness characteristics, which are unique," said Kevin J. Martin, chairman of the Federal Communications Commission and a proponent of more open networks.
With independence, consumers develop a relationship not with their carrier but with the phone or the applications on the phone. Google, one of the most ardent proponents of the move to openness, is certainly aware of that as it builds an operating system that could allow anyone to add applications to any phone using Google Mobile software - without going through a carrier.
"If I'm a developer, my job is to surprise and delight as many people as I can," said Matt Waddell, a product manager for Google Mobile. "That's hard right now because of this fragmentation. We want that to go away for very selfish reasons. We can tell people to go to Google."
He added: "The Internet is not owned by any one company."
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