u•biq•ui•tous, adjective: existing or being everywhere, especially at the same time; omnipresent. A blog to share thoughts and ideas about the evolution of the ubiquitous network. The topics covered in this blog range from device, network, data center, and enterprise software with a special interest in business models, partnerships, developer communities, and technology adoption. The opinions expressed in this blog are mine and not necessarily those of my past or present employers.
Wednesday, December 21, 2011
Amazon sought to buy BlackBerry maker RIM
Looks like more bad news are piling up for RIM. It makes sense for Amazon to control another corner of the network triangle. I just wish they had better options than RIM at this point. I haven't seen a good plan and value proposition from Amazon or RIM to recruit the developer community to develop on their products. Until then, their products (tablets or phones) will lack a vibrant application ecosystem.
Tuesday, December 20, 2011
The AT&T/T-Mobile Merger Is Dead
It's official, AT&T has ended his bid to acquire T-Mobile USA. I had some doubts that the deal would have difficulties going through the Feds approval back in March. The $4B break-up fee might be bad news for AT&T but I'm more concerned about how T-Mobile is going to recover from the deal. I'm pretty sure they have been hemorrhaging subscribers leading to the FCC decision and the announcement won't help bring new users.
Saturday, December 17, 2011
Will BlackBerry survive 2012?
Good article here. The answer is no. According to research group Canalys, RIM's share of the smartphone market in the US fell to 9.2% in the third quarter from 24% in the same period last year. You don't recover from this kind of numbers, not unless you have a great plan in the works.
There might be room for another developer environment on top of iOS and Android, but it is not going to be RIM (Microsoft is not going to abandon a market that could grow into a trillion dollars). RIM totally missed the apps boat and doesn't have an attractive value proposition for users and developers. Why would you spend time and money porting your apps on a platform with a declining number of activated users?
There might be room for another developer environment on top of iOS and Android, but it is not going to be RIM (Microsoft is not going to abandon a market that could grow into a trillion dollars). RIM totally missed the apps boat and doesn't have an attractive value proposition for users and developers. Why would you spend time and money porting your apps on a platform with a declining number of activated users?
Labels:
android,
apple,
developers,
mobility,
rim
Tuesday, December 6, 2011
Android Market hits 10 billion downloads
- Android App downloads are growing faster than iOS' (took almost a year for Apple to double download but just over 6 months for Android)
- More Android devices activated every day than iOS'
- Open vs. Closed
- Apple is delivering always innovative and flawless products and other vendors are playing catch up
- Superior user experience across all Apple's products
Labels:
mobility
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