Will Android kill Australia's iPhone obsession?

Renai LeMay
18 May 2010, 10:29 PM


A funny thing has started to happen in the last few months.


opinion A funny thing has started happening to me over the past few months.

The story goes like this: I walk into a cafe and sit down for a coffee. It could be with a friend, or something related to my work — a meeting with a source or a client.

We exchange greetings and order. My standard is either a decaf latte — yes, essentially a warm milk — or a long black, depending on how hardcore I am trying to look. I’m quite partial to a blueberry muffin but I see it as excessive and so normally abstain.

We’re enjoying the cafe atmosphere — the background music, the morning light, the rustling of newspapers and the intense look on the faces of our fellow customers as they peer deep into their laptop screens as if they can divine the secrets of the universe there. And maybe they can — after all, Stephen Hawking is on Twitter.

And then, amidst all of this morning pleasantness and civilisation, my coffee mate turns to me like a bolt out of the blue and pulls a small, gleaming object that I only barely recognise out of their pocket. They hold it up like it was their precious newborn child, cradling it with a look of naked satisfaction, and say:

“Have you seen my new Android phone?”

They then proceed to show me — in great detail — the ways in which their Android phone is better than my iPhone. It has a better camera. It integrates better with Google services like GMail. It has Adobe Flash (hi, Steve!), the window shade feature for multiple alerts, background processes, you can more easily connect it to your PC without the iTunes nightmare, it’s open source, Google isn’t censoring its applications market and so on.

After about ten minutes of this, I say something like “that’s enough!” and change the topic of conversation.

Outside I am calm and controlled. But internally I am in full, lock-down panic mode. The reason is that this Android exhibitionism is the same behaviour I used to witness from people when pulling out their iPhone. It signifies that although I own an iPhone, a Wii, an Xbox 360, two high-specced PCs with multiple monitors and about a bajillion other tech gadgets, I could again be at risk of falling behind on the technology curve. And that is something I simply cannot tolerate.

The question that I and a number of other people are asking at the moment is: Is the tide starting to turn on Apple’s flagship iPhone in Australia? Is it time to dump the iPhone and join the other camp?

Over the past few months, all of Australia’s major carriers have put a strong focus on launching Android-based handsets that provide much of the same functionality as the iPhone — but with more choice.

Telstra has the HTC Desire (and the Australian buzz around it has been intense), Optus is focusing on Motorola and is rumoured to be bringing the HTC Legend Down Under, and it looks like virtually everyone has the Sony Ericsson Xperia X10. And this is just the start — apparently at the recent Mobile World Congress in Barcelona Android was all anyone was talking about.

There’s even been a blog set up — Android Australia — just to cover Android launches locally.

Of course, Apple has a stranglehold on the Australian mobile market and has had for some time. The expected launch over the next few months of the company’s next iPhone (hello, Gizmodo!) will only give it a stronger sales story. It has the hardware, the applications, the brand and the growing eco-system to keep the iPhone platform as the dominant smartphone player for some time.

But Apple’s problem with the iPhone at the moment is that there is not much it can really add to the device to make it more attractive to those who don’t have one. And this is exactly the opportunity which Android is slowly starting to capitalise on.

Google’s fledgling mobile platform is increasingly offering Australian telcos and customers most of the shiny things that the iPhone does — as well as everything Apple refuses to put into its tightly controlled handset.

Custom phone designs to suit every customer and manufacturer. Handset distribution through the traditional vendor/telco partnerships. A much more open platform that telcos can customise with their own branded services and users can customise to their heart’s content.

And yes, even “adult applications” for that time you want to get your sexy on in the back of the Cadillac.

These are all things that Australia’s mobile ecosystem wants from its smartphone manufacturers. And increasingly, it’s Apple’s rivals that are meeting this customer demand. Apple doesn’t meet customer demand that is already in existence. It meets customer demand that it creates itself.

If I was to sum up the growing feeling amongst Australian early technology adopters at the moment, I would say it’s probably the same feeling they had back in 1985 when it became apparent that Apple was going to launch its long-term technique of tying its hardware, software (and now, internet platforms) together into one unbreakable package that creates a great overall solution … but has a bunch of niggling problems due to Steve Jobs’ personal foibles.

In short: Sure, Windows is not as good a solution as an Apple operating system. But you can run anything you like on it, and it runs on anything you like. Just like Android.

The question is — will Australia’s early Android enthusiasm translate into the mainstream? And what shine will it take off the iPhone if it does?

Delimiter


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Brains (New user):

Your opinion piece seems muddled at best.
Sure there are a bunch of new phones coming out running Android. There are always new phones coming out, with more features, higher specs, etc.
The same is true for the iPhone.
As for 1985 being the year for tying hardware and software together? 1985 was the year Steve was kicked out of Apple and went on to start NeXT. But Apple have always made a complete computer solution (Hardware and Software), much like every other computer of the era (except for the horde of clones buying into MS DOS).
Then you go on to say Windows is not as good a solution as an Apple operating system, but you can run anything you like on it. Well you can run anything you like on Apple's OS-X as well (they even give you the complete developers kit for free if you care to write your own software).
Or perhaps you are referring to Windows on Phones? (good luck with that :-)
I think you should probably give up on the decaf latte, and go for a long black before writing your next op. piece! :-)



18 May 2010, 11:15 PM (2 years ago)report abuse Send to a friend reply

alohomora1111 (New user):

Sorry, I must be missing something. What current Android phone has Adobe Flash? Also, Android doesn't have anything to sync to your PC with, everything is manually managed by dragging and dropping from/to the SD card. I know some people prefer this, but when you have >2GB of anything, music or photos, some sort of syncing app like iTunes is much more efficient & effective.

18 May 2010, 11:40 PM (2 years ago)report abuse Send to a friend reply

agami (New user):

This is one of your better ones Renai.

This has happened several times to various technology arenas over the decades. It reminds me of the transition from the Atari, Nintendo, Sega console arena to the Sony, Microsoft, Nintendo arena we have today.

In this particular instance it was Apple who came in and showed the established smartphone makers/platforms i.e. Nokia, Microsoft, RIM, that there is a different way of doing things. Apple has had the lead but it was never going to be the only player in this revamped arena, which I see as being Apple, Google, HP, and maybe Microsoft, if they buy RIM.

18 May 2010, 11:50 PM (2 years ago)report abuse Send to a friend reply

FostWare (New user):

I think Apple has it's issues because they don't want users, they want consumers. Microsoft is heading the same way with vanilla Windows Mobile 7 (Hello, Microsoft? The HTC UI was *gaining* you converts you idiots!)

Back to the gist of the issue - Apple has iTunes (middle-layer), the handset (upper layer), and hold over the apps on the handset (top layer). They have become the recording industry of the Noughties - advertiser, distributor, middle-man, kingmaker, and most importantly they take a cut at every level.

Android circumvents that and it's got people feeling (quite rightly) that they've been had by Apple's marketing. Unfortunately, Apple doesn't realise it's become "The Man on The Screen" they attacked in 1984 and the suggestion box seems to come from a homogeneous committee. I mean which product *chooses* to have a 2MP camera in 2009?

Me? I'm happy with my N95, but I'm either going to upgrade to a Android or N8 later this year...

19 May 2010, 2:46 AM (2 years ago)report abuse Send to a friend reply

techdribble (User):

When my contract is up at the end of June I will be replacing my iphone with a Android phone. The biggest problem I have with the iphone is itunes on windows is a very ordinary piece of software to say the least.

19 May 2010, 8:35 AM (2 years ago)report abuse Send to a friend reply

Tin (Regular user):

Quoting techdribble:
itunes on windows is a very ordinary piece of software to say the least.


I don't think much more of it on Mac OSX either - seems always to want to sell me stuff and guess what I want to do rather than actually do what I wanted it to.

19 May 2010, 9:55 AM (2 years ago)report abuse Send to a friend reply

deusexmachina (New user):

Quoting Tin:
seems always to want to sell me stuff and guess what I want to do rather than actually do what I wanted it to.

??? Im not sure iTunes has ever tried to sell me something ??? I've actually always seen this as the strength of Apple. The hardware will always be changing but iTunes controls your access to your content through one window. Yes it could be improved, but so could every piece of software on the planet. Does Android have a similar interface other than dragging and dropping to it as a storage device, that is so 1990...


19 May 2010, 12:07 PM (2 years ago)report abuse Send to a friend reply

Tin (Regular user):

Quoting deusexmachina:
Does Android have a similar interface other than dragging and dropping to it as a storage device


What's so hard about that? Drag, drop. Wow that's hard. If you really must have a sync program, a 2 second Google search gave me at least 3 options (didn't check platforms).

But, given even a "simple" phone has so many functions now, and many enabled by 3rd party software, why would you want to limit yourself to copying just music, video and apps?

19 May 2010, 6:59 PM (2 years ago)report abuse Send to a friend reply

HappyOne :-) (New user):

Will Android kill Australia's iPhone obsession?

Renai... I bloody hope so!

19 May 2010, 11:14 AM (2 years ago)report abuse Send to a friend reply

HappyOne :-) (New user):

Will Android kill Australia's iPhone obsession?

Renai... I bloody hope so!

19 May 2010, 11:16 AM (2 years ago)report abuse Send to a friend reply

dbareis (New user):

Love my Android phone ;-)

19 May 2010, 11:20 AM (2 years ago)report abuse Send to a friend reply

Marcusg (New user):

I'm all for competition, but will this mean Norton for Android? Can people afford to download third party apps that can be produced by anyone? Hate Apple and its closed Apps and OS approach (and I do) but I'm not sure that the alternative will be better or stable. How long can most people go without their phone should a virus wipe out its contents? Or have a bill where all the numbers in your phone's contacts got rung multiple times just for the 'fun' of it? Or how about sending rude and explicit text messages to your business contacts?

19 May 2010, 4:58 PM (2 years ago)report abuse Send to a friend reply

Tin (Regular user):

Quoting Marcusg:
I'm all for competition, but will this mean Norton for Android?


What? You mean like how we all need AV software for Windows Mobile because anyone could write an app for that?

Simple fact is, Windows Mobile, jailbroken iPhones, and most Nokias are open to the same exploits. Android is not alone.

19 May 2010, 7:45 PM (2 years ago)report abuse Send to a friend reply

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