The new Apple iPhone 5 is displayed on Wednesday, Sept 12, 2012 following the introduction of new products in San Francisco. The iPhone 5 is a blend of beauty, utility and versatility. (AP)
In 2016, phonemakers will ship a billion smartphones, according to research firm NPD DisplaySearch. That will be one smartphone for nearly every sixth person on the planet. The pot of gold at the end of that particular rainbow is pretty gigantic, and it is little wonder that vicious battles are being fought in courtrooms and markets around the world. It is into this ultimate war for tech dominance that the iPhone 5 has been delivered.
True to form, Apple delivered yet another competent iteration of its money-spinning device. But the 'reality distortion field' mastered by the late Steve Jobs is starting to wear off. Look closer (in a manner of speaking, of course), and what we have is a device physically sleeker than its predecessor, but not all that different fundamentally.
While it is true that smartphones have matured as a product category and we are mostly going to see incremental changes as opposed to defining innovations (touchscreen, apps, retina display, Siri, etc.), there is something more at work here.
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From Leader to Follower
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If there is one decision that was forced on Apple, this is it. Apple has always stuck with compatible aspect ratios and resolutions on its iPhones and iPads for a reason — the vast array of apps in its appstore should work seamlessly across devices and iterations. For the first time, some 700,000 apps made for iOS will appear letterboxed (with black bars at the edges) on Apple's latest device, not an experience the company is known to tolerate.
Apple's decision to do away with Google Maps as standard maps solution in iOS and opt for a proprietary solution is in parts driven by its worsening rivalry with Google. But it is also born out of a desire to take control of the maps experience. Nokia, for instance, has been getting attention for its maps and offline navigation suite, thanks to its $8.1-billion acquisition of Navteq.
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Playing Catch Up
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While developers on Android and Windows phone are busy developing apps to exploit the NFC abilities of devices made by Samsung and Nokia, iOS developers are not going to start work on it till Apple unveils a device with that functionality. At least a year from now, if ever.
Not that coming late to a scene ever stopped Apple from going on to dominate it, but nonetheless. Also, NFC is just the kind of feature that allows for gimmicky product demos — tap a speaker with your phone and it starts playing the song that is playing on your phone. Samsung Galaxy S3 can program NFC chips to perform a range of tasks. At the moment, it looks like a built-in mobile wallet with NFC will be pioneered by a manufacturer on the Windows Phone or Android platforms.
All of which is to say, that on paper, feature to feature, there are phones that comfortably eclipse the iPhone 5. Not to mention value for money, since that has never been Apple's brand premise.
But the cultural and lifestyle appeal that comes bundled with an Apple product, assiduously built by the world's most advanced marketing machine, remains unbeaten. That bit of Apple magic, along with a richly deserved reputation for making durable, trouble-free gadgets, made sure that the most incremental iPhone release in history was met with the most enthusiastic pre-order response ever.
(Disclaimer: The writer recently travelled to New York for the launch of Nokia Lumia 920 on the company's invitation | source economictimes )
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