Apple maps a path to mobile throne

0 comments

SAN FRANCISCO: Apple is mapping a path to the throne of the Internet age mobile lifestyle.

Coming upgrades to the software that powers its hot-selling iPhones reveal  a strategy to keep users in Apple’s “walled garden” as smartphones become  essential components of day-to-day life.

A centerpiece of the plan was booting Google Maps from iOS software  powering Apple iPhones, iPads, and iPod Touch devices and replacing it with a  custom-made mapping service.

The move announced on Monday is not only another shot in the ongoing battle  between the California technology titans, but lays groundwork for Apple to take  on its arch rival in areas such as search and smartphone “digital wallets.”    “Location-based services, maps, are a key strategic asset in the mobile  services arena,” NPD analyst Ross Rubin said Tuesday.

Delivering iPhone services based on locations, and in the context of what  users might be doing at the time, was a major theme during the presentation  that kicked off Apple’s annual Worldwide Developers Conference this week.

People could get spoken turn-by-turn directions from the Siri personal  assistant technology or signal an iPhone to let a caller know they were in a  meeting, and remind them to return the call after they leave the room.

Siri in iPhones will find nearby restaurants or movie theaters, weaving in  reviews from customer-feedback websites Yelp or Rotten Tomatoes and even  letting people buy film tickets from Fandango.

“I think Apple recognizes how important that experience is to a mobile  device,” Creative Strategies principal analyst Ben Bajarin said of tying  smartphone services to people’s locations.

“Apple wants to own that experience,” he continued. “They brought it into  their walled garden in a very useful way.”    Apple controlling everything from the hardware to the software on its  gadgets is referred to as a “walled garden” with the California company acting  as vigilant overseer.

“With Apple’s platform now set to leverage advancements in location  determination technologies, the opportunity for compelling, commercial  location-based services has never been more attractive,” said Frost & Sullivan  global research director Brent Iadarola.

Apple had sold more than 365 million mobile devices by the end of March,  according to senior vice president of iOS software Scott Forstall.

Next-generation iOS 6 to be released later this year features more than 200  enhancements including Siri getting smarter about nearby restaurants, films,  sports teams and more, Forstall said.

Analysts believed that a “sleeper feature” could be Passbook, which gives  iPhone users a place to digitally store coupons, customer reward card  information, film tickets or airline flight boarding passes.

Bar or QR codes displayed on iPhone screens can be scanned at checkouts or  checkpoints. Passbook synchs with location.

For example, Passbook would pop loyalty card information to the iPhone lock  screen if a user was near a shop that they frequent.

“Anybody else calls that a digital wallet,” said Forrester analyst Charles  Golvin.

“It is clear that apple put a bull’s-eye on that, and that means the next  iPhone will have NFC (near-field communication) or physical payment  capabilities,” he continued.

The road ahead for Passbook likely includes ability to pay for real-world  transactions with credit or debit cards or through iTunes accounts, according  to Golvin.

There are more than 400 million iTunes accounts, complete with credit cards  on file, according to Apple chief executive Tim Cook.

“Apple sees the entire chain of commerce — picking something out, finding  an outlet, after sales enticements for accessories — is a very rich  opportunity,” he said. “Pun intended in terms of revenue opportunity for Apple.”    Google built NFC technology into its Android-powered smartphones to let  people use handsets as digital wallets.

“It looks like Apple is aggressively out to displace Google on all fronts,”  said independent Silicon Valley analyst Rob Enderle.

“We are starting to see the emergence of Tim Cook’s Apple,” he said of the  successor to the company’s legendary co-founder Steve Jobs, who died last year.

Cook is apparently approaching the market competition in terms of  applications, content and other components being an “ecosystem” instead of just  focusing on making hot-selling devices such as the iPhone, Enderle.said.

Apple is shoring up its iOS to offset features or services offered in  handsets by competitors such as Google or Microsoft so the rivals don’t “work  around them and take away their customers,” the analyst said.

Apple has targeted Google as not only a competitor but an enemy, filing  civil suits in an array of countries charging that Apple innovations have been  used in Android operating system for smartphones and tablet computers.

Apple is integrating leading social network and fellow Google adversary  Facebook into its iPhone platform and even into the iTunes online shop, where  people will be able to show friends what they “Like.”    “There is some element of the enemy or my enemy being my friend,” Rubin  said of Apple cozying up to Facebook to enhance iOS 6 with social features to  complete the Silicon Valley holy triad of “social-local-mobile.” - AFP

Leave Your Comment


Leave Your Comment:

New Straits Times reserves the right not to publish offensive or abusive comments and those of hate speech, harassment, commercial promos and invasion of privacy. Your IP will be logged and may be used to prevent further submission.The views expressed here are that of the members of the public and unless specifically stated are not those of NST.