MobileBizBuzz

February 15, 2010

Here We Go Again

lots-of-phonesTwenty-four wireless telecommunications companies united to announce the Wholesale Applications Community at the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona.  Gizmodo has a good overview of the announcement on one of its blogs.  The concept sounds great on the surface, but I am less than enthusiastic they will have any meaningful success.

They are attempting to solve a worthy problem. Every mobile application developer faces a huge hill to climb every time they want to develop a new application.  If you want to write a piece of software that will run on most of the smartphones out there so you have a large market, here is what you have to do:

  • Design the application
  • If you want to develop for the iPhone:
    1. Download the Software Developer’s Kit
    2. Write the application
    3. Test the application
    4. Sign up as a developer on the App Store
    5. Pay your fee
    6. Agree to all the contractual obligations
    7. Submit you application for approval
    8. Wait, wait, and then wait some more
    9. Celebrate when your application is finally approved
    10. Hopefully begin selling your software
  • If you want to develop for the BlackBerry, repeat steps 1-10 above
  • If you want to develop for Android, repeat steps 1-10 above
  • I could go on, but I think you get the idea

Conceptually what the Wholesale Applications Community wants to do is great. They want to make an environment where a developer can write a piece of software once, and then be able to port (technical term for copy) the application to multiple other types of phones on multiple other carriers (Verizon, Sprint, etc.).  They also want the developer to not have to deal with multiple app stores from multiple device makers.  Sounds great, right?

Problem is, it won’t work. If you know me personally, you would know that I am a very optimistic person. So why do I think this is a lost cause. Because it has been tried before in many situations other than mobile applications, and it has always failed.  There are many reasons for this, but here are my top three for this specific instance:

  1. Even though you provide a common software development environment, by definition it must support devices with a least common denominator approach. As soon as a device maker offers, and a developer takes advantage of, a unique feature on a specific device, the application is no longer portable to other devices.
  2. Apple, BlackBerry, and Google already have pretty well established App Stores. Introducing a new app store alternative will be pretty difficult, even if it helps the developer community. Let’s face it, there are technology bigots who are in love with devices from a specific maker, and they are very unlikely to be open to trying other environments.
  3. Look at who is missing from the list of supporters for this effort. No Apple. No BlackBerry (RIM for you industry folks). No Google. No Microsoft. Nuff said.

Once you have been around information technology for a while, you see trends repeat themselves over an over. The whole concept of a common development environment has been attempted many times. It really started common programming languages like FORTRAN, and with Operating Systems like Unix.  The idea of a common app store married with a common development environment is just a different spin on the same theme.  I get why they are doing it. I just don’t think it will succeed.

Remember, this is just my opinion, and your mileage may vary.

February 25, 2009

787,000,000,000 Reasons to Think Mobile: Healthcare

If you haven’t had the chance to review the Stimulus Bill, you may want to take some time to do your own homework.  My suggestion is to review several news sources.  Each one I read pulls out another nugget of information that I did not get from the previous one.  A good place to start, and the shocker for me, is this six page and over 300 line item entry report of the classification, industry/government branch, description and cost in millions of taxpayer dollars.

In the mobile technology industry that is serving businesses, we take pride in bringing efficiencies to almost every conceivable process.   Government is a services business, and in almost every department the inefficiences are glaring.  Government is getting bigger and with a recessionary economy, government and business will need to strive to become more efficient and make the most of every dollar.

My desire is to  highlight and enlist your comments on the impact of the Stimulus Bill on a variety of industries.  A good place to start is the industry with the highest GDP.  Healthcare is approaching 18% of our national consumption/output.  This is a $2,500,000,000,000 industry supported by trillions of dollars in state and federal spending.  Where does mobility have a positive effect on your tax dollars being put to work?

The first healthcare stimulus program that can be impacted is the $1,100,000,000 in funding for research that compares medical treatment and services.  Our customers have programs in Canada where processes in the operating room are monitored and compared using mobile technology.  This information streamlines diagnosis, treatment and rehabilitation for the patient by identifying best practices.  There are real savings to the system.

The second healthcare related stimulus which caught my attention is the $18,000,000,000 Healthcare Information Technology line item.  This is an effort to digitize medical records and ‘create billions of dollars in savings’ to an inefficient system.  As those in the wireless industry know, what you digitize will be ‘mobilized’, as the value of that information getting to doctors, nurses and other practitioners who are away from the office will be a necessity.

February 24, 2009

Applications Everywhere

Filed under: Industry News,Mobile Apps — Tags: , Mike @ 1:37 pm

Over lunch today I read a story on the winners and losers at the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona.  In this story, Sue Marek of FierceWireless took time to reflect on what she and other editorial team members saw at the show.  The article discusses the winners and losers in five areas:

  1. US Operators
  2. Handsets
  3. Infrastructure Vendors
  4. App Stores
  5. Operating Systems

What I find interesting about the list is not so much who the winners and losers are perceived to be, but the fact that App Stores made the list as a category.  I haven’t taken to time to look back and see if they did a similar story last year, but if they did they could not have even had App Stores on the list.  Do you know why?  None of them existed.  In less than a year, the iPhone App Store has emerged from non-existence to offer 15,000 applications which have collectively been downloaded over 500 million times.  The Android Market has much fewer applications, but millions of downloads already.

Applications are becoming a key part of what people are looking for on their mobile devices.  We are just at the beginning of this wave in mobility.  It will be interesting to see who the winners and losers in mobile applications are next year.

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