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Entries for the ‘carriers’ Category

Virgin Mobile Will Euthanize Helio In May [Carriers]

Here’s a funny story! Some time ago, Virgin Mobile snatched up a little wireless company called Helio, with hopes of using it to start a postpaid (on contract) cell service to complement its prepaid business. Then, Sprint, one of the largest postpaid carriers in the country, bought Virgin Mobile, effectively rendering Helio (subsumed into Virgin) pointless. And now, according to Virgin, Helio has an execution date: May 25th. Official statement, as passed to Crunchgear:

No customer will be automatically migrated to Sprint’s postpaid service. However, Sprint has created a special offer for our customers.

Current postpaid customers are being given $50 towards the purchase of a Sprint postpaid handset with a new two-year agreement. This credit is in addition to any applicable rebates that may apply. Postpaid customers moving from Virgin Mobile to Sprint will also receive $150 off of handsets as part of Sprint’s standing new customer offer. Activation fees will also be waived.


From the Forums: iPhone OS 4.0, Carriers, Windows 7, iPhone Battery Tips

So you say you have some time to kill before the big Apple Keynote today? Why not spend it chatting in our forums! All you need to do is register and you are on your way. Once registered be sure to check out some of the following threads!

Everyone is expecting iPhone OS 4.0 to be [...]

This is a story by the iPhone Blog. This feed is sponsored by The iPhone Blog Store.

From the Forums: iPhone OS 4.0, Carriers, Windows 7, iPhone Battery Tips

iPhone May Leave AT&T Exclusivity Wednesday [Rumor]

It’s almost inevitable that AT&T will lose its iPhone exclusivity sooner or later. According to Hot Hardware, that milestone could come as early as next Wednesday at Apple’s special event.

It makes sense for Apple: analysts say iPhone sales could as much as double as a result of pursuing broader carrier distribution. Plus, it would help assuage the Justice Department, who have indicated concern over iPhone exclusivity with AT&T.

It even makes sense for AT&T, who in some ways are arguably shouldering an excessive burden by being the sole carrier of the data-intensive device. Many of the customer complaints about AT&T’s service (or lack thereof) can be traced to network troubles that are primarily a result of the bandwidth-hungry Apple phone.

So now rumour has it that at least one of the other 3 U.S. carriers may add the iPhone to its roster next week. The inside sources that conveyed the news didn’t disclose any details about which carrier that might be, but earlier rumours point to Verizon as a likely candidate.

If you’ve been holding out on buying an iPhone until it left the AT&T fold, would you consider picking one up on another carrier? If so, which carrier would it have to be? Current iPhone owners: would you consider switching carriers? Or are you content with the iPhone on AT&T?

Tags: apple, att, carriers, iphone, justice department, money, rumours, verizon

How Did AT&T Hold Up at CES 2010? Root Wireless (and TiPb) Report!

One of the more interesting conversations the Smartphone Experts team had at CES 2010 was with Root Wireless, who monitors the performance of Verizon, AT&T, Sprint, and T-Mobile in the US. Their overall message is that there’s no single best carrier, because it varies so much from place to place, but they did try to [...]

This is a story by the iPhone Blog. This feed is sponsored by The iPhone Blog Store.

How Did AT&T Hold Up at CES 2010? Root Wireless (and TiPb) Report!

From the Forums: iPhone OS 4.0, Nokia Experts Needs Your Help, 4th Gen iPhone Concepts, Plans and Carriers

From the Forums is a great way to see what all of the current hot topics are on the TiPb forums. Today we would like to go over some of the popular sub-forums for those of you who may not be familiar with our forum setup. Becoming a member is fast and free, so if [...]

This is a story by the iPhone Blog. This feed is sponsored by The iPhone Blog Store.

From the Forums: iPhone OS 4.0, Nokia Experts Needs Your Help, 4th Gen iPhone Concepts, Plans and Carriers

How Carriers and Phone Makers Are Strangling Android (And How Google Could Save It) [Rant]

The Google Phone could be a ploy to upset the wireless industry, or it could be an expensive niche device. Either way, it’d be a bid to take Android back from the companies that seem hell-bent on destroying it.

Android’s most serious problem right now is fragmentation: with each new phone, it seems, comes a different version of the OS. In theory, these differences are superficial, and come down to handset manufacturers’ and carriers’ custom interfaces, which sit atop a mostly unchanged Android core. In practice, it’s much worse.

Just look at the current top tier of Android devices. The Motorola Droid runs Android 2.0. The HTC MyTouch 3G and G1 on T-Mobile run Android 1.6. The HTC Hero, a newer phone than the MyTouch and the G1, is still stuck on 1.5, along with the even newer Motorola Cliq, which shares one parent—Motorola—with the 2.0-loaded Droid. Why is this something to worry about? Remember Google Maps Navigation, the free turn-by-turn app for Android? It only works on Android 2.0 and 1.6. An app written by Google doesn’t even work on every new Google phone. Imagine how things are with third party apps. (Spoiler: it’s a shitshow.)

Google’s been fairly diligent about updating the free, open-source heart of Android moving forward at a steady pace, and supplying handset manufacturers with the tools they need to keep their handsets running the latest software. That said, Google still deserves some of the blame here. That their software updates include new, exclusive functionality is fine on its own. And yeah, their eagerness to allow for Android to be skinned and deeply customized by handset manufacturers is fine on its own—in fact, it’s implicit in the project’s open source ethos. But mixed together, these ambitions create a gurgling software slurry of incompatibility, user experience inconsistency and general frustration. (See: Samsung Behold II) So what happened?

The problem is in the model. Android updates seed out through carriers, over the air or with special installers. This is because the updates are their responsibility: once handset manufacturers (and carriers, through handset manufacturers) have built their own version of Android, they’ve effectively taken it out of the development stream. Updating it is their responsibility, which they have to choose to uphold. Or not! Who cares? The phones are already sold. And there’s very little to motivate a carrier or handset manufacturer to update their Android phones, because the consequences tend to fall on Google: If Android fragments, the App Market doesn’t work. The public sours. Android starts to suck. This is where the Nexus One comes in.

Sold without a carrier, software updates for the Nexus One will be in Google’s hands. They will be able to keep it up to date as Android develops, without having to depend on some other company—or companies—not to drop the ball. Users won’t have to bother learning Google’s esoteric dessert-themed version codenames, and life will be better. This approach to software updates already has a case study: the iPhone. There’s a good reason Apple didn’t entrust AT&T with keeping the iPhone up to date, and that they didn’t want the company that actually manufacturers the phone—Foxconn—to have any responsibility for its software. Smartphone software is finicky and complicated, and so is the experience of using it. It needs to be tightly controlled to remain consistent, and because apps are the most important part of a smartphone platform nowadays, consistency is life or death.

Without totally changing what the Android project is, Google can’t put an absolute stop to fragmentation. What they can do is provide an example of how an Android phone should be done. With the Nexus One, Google probably isn’t getting into the business of making hardware; they’re just trying, in their passive, Googly way, to regain control of a project that’s spiraling toward chaos.

Update: Some input from someone who works in a major carrier’s device development group:

There is TONS of incentive for carriers to update their
software. Take a look at Verizon hosting the only Android 2.0 device.
Are you going to tell me that Sprint and T-Mobile wouldn’t love to
have their Android devices on 2.0 yesterday?

The truth is, there’s very little incentive for the Handset maker to
provide an update. All those phones are already sold and in the
carrier’s inventory. Any investment in updating those models will
bring them no additional cash flow. However focusing on their next
model will.

He’s partly right: carriers have a motivation to keep their software up to date, in that they are the ones who have to deal most with customers. Handset manufacturers are the one’s with the least motivation, since their sale has already been made. But in branding a handset with their name, effectively selling it as their product, and assuming responsibility for seeding updates, a carrier becomes responsible for making sure their customers have up-to-date software, and exerting pressure on handset manufacturers is they don’t hold up their end. —Thanks, David!



More Windows Mobile Smartphones Coming Our Way before Year’s End

Microsoft had announced last week that Sprint, AT&T and Verizon have all committed themselves to the October 6 launch of Windows Mobile 6.5, now Digitimes’ trusted unnamed sources – the finest in Taiwan – have revealed that Microsoft has secured the backing of many other telecom carriers around the world, including NTT DoCoMO, T-Mobile, Orange, Softbank Mobile, SKT, Telstra and Telus.

According to Benjamin Tan, senior director of Microsoft’s GCR Mobile Team Unit in China, there will be more than 30 smartphones running WinMo 6.5 by the end of this year. He told a congregation of reporters in China that the first batch of WinMo 6.5 phones will be supplied by 15 different handset vendors.

Digitimes added that HTC, Acer, Samsung Electronics, LG Electronics, Sony Ericsson, Toshiba, and Hewlett-Packard are among the handset vendors backing the new mobile OS.

Image Credit: PhoneMag

Why Verizon Customers Can’t Have Nice Things [Verizon]

Theorize all you want, but your answer’s right here. From the horse’s mouth: “Keep in mind that for Verizon Wireless, it isn’t so much about the device as it is about the delivery.”

These are the words of a Verizon spokesperson, who is apparently comfortable acknowledging that Verizon’s entire phone-choosing strategy is based on a false dilemma: That somehow, having a good network makes it impossible to have decent handsets, and vice-versa. But if having great coverage doesn’t actually prevent Verizon from selling any of the smartphones that people actually want, how do they make it seem like it does?

It’s easy, really! Just combine a strict, long handset testing process, extreme caution about new handset technologies, and a history of intrusively modifying both phone software and hardware to maintain obsessive control over its devices, and voila! Boredom. [Gadget Lab]



iSuppli Estimate: iPhone 3G Costs About $173 to Manufacture

One of the challenges for manufacturers of consumer electronics products is how to minimize the cost of building a particular gadget, while maximizing profits. Cut too many corners, and there’s the risk of losing potential customers. Spend too much on features people don’t really care about, and it’s likely the result will be unnecessary costs.

 

It appears that Apple has struck a pretty good balance between these two extremes in the new iPhone 3G. That’s the conclusion reached by applied market intelligence firm iSuppli, which makes a habit of taking apart products to find out what’s inside and how much the components cost.

 

While iSuppli hasn’t actually been able to dissect the actual iPhone 3G yet (it won’t be available until July 11), the firm did manage to conduct a “virtual teardown,” and estimated that it will cost Apple about $173 to manufacture each phone. That can be compared with a $226 “bill of materials” (BOM) for the original 8GB iPhone.

 

“The new iPhone is significantly less expensive to produce than the first-generation product, despite major improvements in the product’s functionality and unique usability, due to the addition of 3G communications,” said Jagdish Rebello, director and principal analyst for iSuppli, in a statement.

 

Apple typically prices its iPod and iPhone products at about 50 percent more than their BOM and manufacturing costs, iSuppli said. iPhone 3G is no exception, and in fact Apple will actually make more profit per unit with this product than the previous generation; the new phone sells for $199, and Apple gets an estimated subsidy per unit of $300, from wireless carriers, resulting in a boosted BOM/manufacturing margin.

 

The way iPhone 3G will be sold represents a significant strategic change on the part of Apple.

 

“The original 2G phone was sold at an unsubsidized price of $499,” Rebello explained. “However, at a retail price of $199 for the low-end 8Gbyte version of the new 3G model, wireless communications service carriers will be selling the product at a subsidized rate, using a common business model for the mobile-handset market. … With subsidies from
carriers, Apple will be selling the 8Mbyte version of the second-generation iPhone to carriers at an effective price of about $499 per unit, the same as the original product.”

 

In changing its business model for iPhone, Apple is also giving up service revenue associated with its phone (previously carriers paid the company a portion of revenue from service subscriptions. This means Apple is relying heavily on profiting from carrier subsidies on the hardware.

 

“Hardware is vital to Apple profits, valuation and revenue in the consumer-electronics and wireless communications realms,” Rebello said. “In fact, two-thirds of Apple’s revenue from the iPod still is derived from hardware, while only one third is from the iTunes service and accessories. The second-generation iPhone is no exception.”

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