Any comment?
yang gue rada setuju, usulan nokia mengakusisi Palm saja hehehe..

salam

ferry
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How Palm Lost (Like Apple in the '80s)
taken from: 
http://gizmodo.com/5392799/how-palm-lost-like-apple-in-the-80s?skyline=true&s=x 
<http://gizmodo.com/5392799/how-palm-lost-like-apple-in-the-80s?skyline=true&s=x>

The Droid, and Android 2.0 as a whole, isn't going to kill the iPhone. 
That's ridiculous. Teamed with the iPhone, though, it just straight up 
murdered Palm—the same way that Microsoft brought Apple to its knees 
decades ago.

Reviews aren't even hitting yet, but the early consensus is clear: 
Android 2.0 is the first version of Google's OS that's really grown-up. 
And now, with hardware like the Droid and the Hero, it's not just a 
technological triumph, it's the kind of thing that people—and not just 
leery, jaded tech blog readers—can connect with, and actually use. This 
is huge for Android.

iPhone OS is already a superpower with massive adoption, a huge app 
store and a bright future. They're not going anywhere. They learned 
their lessons about the importance of volume and apps when I was still a 
kid. But what about the other two smartphone players that consumers 
really love? You know, Google vs Palm? Think Apple vs Microsoft, circa 
the late 80s.

Hear me out: With version 2.0, Android is sitting on the cusp of 
greatness. And Palm? They've got a nice OS, but with just two handsets 
and a tiny user base they're up against a wall. Google is old Microsoft: 
They've got a open development platform, tons of hardware partners. 
They're going to start having problems with this strategy—you know, 
fragmentation, device support issues, etc—but as with Microsoft, it's 
going to serve them well, and make them huge. Palm is old Apple: With 
inhouse hardware and iffy developer support, they're just insular. What 
that means:

• Hardware partners: Who isn't developing an Android phone nowadays? 
Motorola, Samsung, LG, Sony Ericsson, and HTC dwarf Palm's hardware 
partner list, which consists of "Palm." Don't get me wrong, the Pre and 
Pixi are nice pieces of hardware—like Apple always had—but it's tough to 
compete with such a broad lineup with just two devices, both of which 
are somewhat polarizing. Android is the new Windows Mobile, but in a 
good way.

• Apps: Apple learned from their past mistakes, and actively courted 
developers from the start. Andriod's start was slower and more organic, 
but seems to so far correlate with handset adoption, meaning it's 
growing, and it's about to grow a lot more. More apps=a better user 
experience=joy for Google. Palm has introduced paid apps, but it's not 
clear why anyone would want to invest in development for such a small 
userbase. (The first paid app, if you remember, was an air hockey game.)

• Apps, again: Android came before webOS, and likewise the Android SDKs 
came well before mojoSDK. But no matter how far into the future you 
look, Google has Palm beaten from a developer standpoint. If Android 
handset sales start to approach iPhone territory—tens of millions—the 
combination of a huge potential market and powerful development tools, 
especially SDK 2.0, will make the choice for developers obvious: Go with 
Apple, or go with Google. Palm won't even register.

• Resources: Google can dedicate tremendous amounts of money and time to 
developing Android, as their pastry-themed release schedule can attest 
to; Palm is hanging by a thread, and they haven't issued a truly major 
update to their OS since it came out. Google can lose money on Android 
for as long as it wants—they've got Microsoft-level buoyancy, those 
guys—while Palm has to turn fast profit by building and selling phones, 
lest their nervous investors jump ship.

• Google is an app development powerhouse: Their apps are becoming more 
and more central to the general smartphone experience. Apple and Palm 
both use Google's maps and search, but naturally, Android always has a 
later, greater version of both. It helps for the company behind a 
platform to supply a few killers apps for it too—just look at Office and 
Window 2.0.

And take what happened yesterday, with Google Navigation for Maps. 
Google can just will a free turn-by-turn navigation app into existence. 
Palm can't do this. They can license Google's technology, sure, but that 
leaves them at the mercy of a competitor.

BlackBerry handsets are safe in their own way—suits need their 
keyboards, and familiarity is worth a lot—and Windows Mobile is on a 
fixed heading for total irrelevance, as evidenced by their 
once-strongest ally, HTC, talking about the OS like it's in hospice 
care. But there are just three true consumer smartphone OSes out 
there—the ones that don't feel like complicated smartphones, but which 
do all the same tricks.

And assuming Apple's is safe—and it is—that leaves two. Like Microsoft 
once was in the desktop computing space, Google is poised for a meteoric 
rise, and like Apple, Palm should be bracing themselves for hard times. 
For all the similarities, though, there's one difference: Palm probably 
won't be able to pull though.


Send an email to John Herrman, the author of this post, at 
[email protected].


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