Lynne Kiesling
The palpable buzz around the release of the iPhone last year was exciting, and indicated some of the great design and functionality we can expect from mobile phones in the future (even if I won’t get one yet because , and I haven’t seen a local vendor selling them unlocked yet for me to take to another provider). But at the same time the iPhone’s functionality was limited relative to its capabilities; it could do so much more than the web-based applications and the Apple applications installed on it.
The title of this PC World article about the SDK gets at the interesting economics of Apple’s decisions, from a property rights perspective.
Apple’s SDK blows open the process of creating native apps for the iPhone by letting most any would-be coder get started. Developers can sign up and download the SDK for free, which in turn allows Apple to reach out to a wider cross-section of would-be coders than they might have otherwise.
According to iPhoneDevCamp co-founder Raven Zachary, “The fear [in the development community] today was that Apple was going to constrain the ability for third-party developers to distribute apps, in the same way they did with the iPod games market.” There, Zachary notes, Apple made it very difficult for small developers to create and release a game: “You have to get Apple’s approval, have them approve the source code, and then they take a large percentage of the profits for the distribution of that app.
“What we’ve seen instead is Apple opening up the marketplace in the same way they’ve opened up the podcast directory in iTunes Music Store. They will be far more open about letting developers list their apps,” says Zachary.
Apple’s software and design are the reasons that this device is so popular, is the phone to beat in the mobile market, and will become increasingly useful in business environments (which is one of the objectives of the various iPhone moves that Apple is currently making). Apple has a long history of keeping its software, its operating system, etc. proprietary; in fact, in the 1980s one of the biggest criticisms of Apple was that IBM and Microsoft’s operating system proliferated and gained larger installed base and market share because of the extent to which they shared information about how to write software interfaces to their operating system.
To me, the most interesting thing about the development of the smartphone industry is the wide-open nature of the race. This time around, a winner is not going to be picked in the early stages of the competition. Several huge important companies–Apple, Microsoft, Google, Nokia, RIM, and don’t forget about Palm just yet–have already had an impact on the development of the product, and will continue to do so well into the future.
Apple has done the complete opposite, hooking those who had never used a smartphone before with the iPhone’s interface, and now giving them the opportunity to use it for both work and play.
The first era of the mobile-computing industry was about hardware. The second part will be about software. And right now, no one is developing mobile software like Apple.
Apple is allowing developers more generous use rights in its software to strengthen the value of the iPhone, and to open the door to further innovation in mobile computing and communications. I hope they continue to turn the mobile communications market on its head: this type of creative destruction is the foundation of our economic well-being.
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