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Thursday, October 20, 2011

The future for feature phones isn't as bleak as it first appears

Mark Bridge writes:

With Hallowe’en just around the corner, thoughts turn to the departed... and it would be easy to think that the market for feature phones is in the technological graveyard. After all, Sony Ericsson has recently said it’ll be dropping feature phones from its product range in 2012. But perhaps the battle of feature phone vs smartphone isn’t over yet.

In fact, recent research suggests there’s still plenty of fight in the old dog. Rather like the petrol engine and AM radio, the feature phone appears to be holding on much longer than many people had previously expected.

This news comes from what might appear to be an unlikely source: Qualcomm. The wireless technology company, whose chips are found in the majority of Android smartphones, asked comScore to look at usage of the Brew mobile platform. Brew MP is a mobile operating system - and a Qualcomm product - that’s found on a wide range of devices, including feature phones and mass-market smartphones.

comScore’s research suggests that half of the top ten mobile devices in the United States are Brew devices. Put another way, 40% of feature phones in the USA run the Brew platform. It means there are around 65.5 million Brew MP users in America; almost as many as the total number of US smartphone subscribers (estimated at 70 million).

As well as being a popular choice, the Brew MP also seems to encourage smartphone-like usage and features. 69% of Brew users are on post-paid contracts compared with 39% of non-Brew featurephone owners - and 47% of Brew devices have 3G capabilities, compared to 32% of other featurephones. Overall, Brew subscribers are 22% more likely to use the mobile internet, applications or downloadable content compared to non-Brew feature phones.

And it’s not just comScore predicting continuing high volumes in the feature phone segment. According to Strategy Analytics, 61% of worldwide mobile phone sales in 2014 will be non-smartphones.

What does this mean?  Well, I’d say it means the market for feature phones definitely isn’t dead. Instead, it appears that feature phones are evolving. They’re getting smarter... and may even be living longer!

[Qualcomm blog; comScore research (pdf)]

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Opinion Articles

Admit your mobile phone mistakes... and pay for them

Mark Bridge writes:

“Take some responsibility for your own actions”. There’s probably not a parent in the world who hasn’t said or thought something similar. But that’s not the message coming from regulators in the USA.

We’ve laughed in the past about coffee cups from the United States that warn about the coffee they contain. Now there seems to be a similar movement against mobile phones that connect to the internet.

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Apple's HTC patent suit could be another reason for someone to buy Palm

This is a guest post from BusinessInsider.com written by Gregor Schauer, who has worked in tech in Silicon Valley since 2000. Gregor has also recently spent two years in equity research at JMP Securities and Jefferies, covering the internet sector and enterprise software.

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Mobile business applications: the next frontier

Anthony Keyworth, Orange UK’s Director of Product Marketing, has been gazing into his crystal ball to predict which business-focussed mobile applications could change the ways we work in the next five years.

His top four future developments, published under the heading “The next frontier for mobile business applications”, are:

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It’s all been done before

Mark Bridge writes:

No-one really likes an anticlimax. That was my biggest complaint about the launch of Microsoft’s Windows Phone 7. Plenty of potential, a nice new interface – but nothing much that wasn’t being done elsewhere.

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The Day the Multi-Touch Died?

Mark Bridge writes:

It’s not just me, is it?  The mobile industry really has gone a bit litigation crazy.

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