From thesmartphoneshow... the smartphone is poised to change the way people live in ways as profound as
those triggered by the Internet and PC in the 1990s. (Nigel Clifford, CEO, Symbian) read on for more from Clifford.
The Symbian Smartphone Show, London UK, 17 October 2006 – At the Symbian Smartphone
Show today Symbian chief executive officer Nigel Clifford today announced that
the smartphone is poised to change the way people live in ways as profound as
those triggered by the Internet and PC in the 1990s.
During his keynote at The Symbian Smartphone Show at ExCel in London, Clifford
stated that a smartphone revolution is well underway and among his forecasts were
that:
the developing world will account for 50% of smartphone sales within five years
a “smartphone generation” is occurring and the demands of the youth market will
drive innovation and smartphone use
mobile phone access will be the next significant Internet phenomenon
At the Symbian Smartphone Show, attended by over 4,000 industry executives and
software developers, discussions focused on how smartphones are becoming central
to the lifestyles of their users. Symbian is the software licensing company that
develops and licenses Symbian OSTM, the market-leading open operating system for
advanced, data-enabled mobile phones known as smartphones.
Arguing that the next big challenge for the mobile phone industry is to make
smartphones more accessible to many more people, Clifford said the smartphone
already combined over 20 standalone devices and gave users instant and constant
access to the world’s sources of information and entertainment. He stated that
smartphones, while only 4% of the worldwide mobile market today, are a broadening
category, crossing markets and segments and, according to Gartner, will reach
200 million units a year by 2008.
Nigel Clifford said:
“25 years ago Bill Gates had a vision of a computer on every desk and in every
home – and no one will dispute that the PC has been incredibly successful. Today
that vision is renewed – we aim to have a smartphone in every pocket, a smartphone
that will liberate us from our desks and cables, a smartphone that will allow
us to do what we want, when we want, and where we want.”
Innovation is already encouraging people to use smartphones in ways that were
inconceivable until recently. For example, Symbian OS is being used in phones
that incorporate:
calorie counters and pedometers, for sports categories
panic alarms and exercise monitors, for devices aimed at the elderly
Biometrics, ID and face recognition
electronic wallets
6 GB of music - the equivalent of leading single purpose MP3 players
5 megapixel cameras, waterproof cameras
‘place-shifting’ capability to access remote content from your home or office
PC
personal-video-recording capability
multiplayer 3D games
Voice over IP
Clifford further argued that the cost of developing new smartphones would fall
as the industry benefits from greater economies of scale. Moore’s Law, more robust
technology, and more compelling content have all contributed to bring the mobile
phone industry to a “tipping point” where smartphones enter higher volume use.
Symbian, in conjunction with user interface software partners S60, UIQ, and MOAP,
is assisting the industry in the development of mobile phone “platforms”, from
which various models can be developed, each styled to appeal to a segment of the
market but with much of the software and componentry in common to keep costs low.
This “develop once, use often” mantra was behind the decisions at NTT DoCoMo,
Vodafone, and Orange to make software platform selections involving Symbian OS
– operators with a combined customer base of 310 million users. NTT DoCoMo has
shipped 36 Symbian smartphones in 36 months with several Symbian OS licensees.
Reduction in time-to-market of new models demonstrated that the operator has been
able to increase the flow of product innovations and new features.
Clifford argued that two fundamental trends would shape the mobile industry in
future.
First, the developing world would use smartphones much more than generally anticipated.
Clifford stated that mobile phones present the developing world with a huge opportunity
to fast-forward into the information era (a process known as economic ‘leapfrogging’).
So, smartphones may have their highest penetration rates in the most saturated
and developed markets of the EMEA region and Japan, but the highest growth rates
were in developing markets.
He forecasts that smartphones – not basic voice-only phones – would be in widespread
use in countries such as India because phones were:
cheaper than PCs
greater in number (five times more of them)
growing at ten times the speed
capable of a rich mobile Internet experience
Symbian was not alone in finding that the developing world is turning to mobile
for Internet access. Africa accounts for 80% of the BBC WAP site hits from outside
the UK. The smartphone was bringing information to the eyes and ears of many people.
Nigel Clifford said:
“In case you think this growth in developing markets is high growth from a low
base, think again. China now accounts for one in six of all smartphones sold –
almost twice as many as sold in North America.”
Second, young people are starting to view smartphones as essential to their lifestyle.
They would be brutal in deciding whether a device was right for them, as Symbian
knows from its experience in the fashion-conscious market of Japan. These youngsters
represent a massive opportunity with more than $1 trillion in disposable income.
Two-thirds of the young people who do not yet own a phone are in China and India.
Smartphones are already central to the lifestyle of many people. Under discussion
at the Show were applications for the delivery of
music: Symbian smartphones outsold the iPodTM by 45% in H1 2006. Sony Ericsson
is using its Walkman brand for the forthcoming W950i Walkman, Nokia has launched
a music content business fronted by David Bowie and a 8GB handset (the Nokia N91)
offering 6,000 tracks, newly announced Symbian smartphones in Japan by NTT DoCoMo
have FM transmitters for streaming music, up to 45h playback time and even include
the Napster-to-go service
video and TV: Launched at the Symbian Smartphone Show, Sling Media delivers
personal TV home viewing to Symbian smartphones, while newly announced in Japan,
NTT DoCoMo phones based on Symbian OS have digital TV reception, can record to
memory card, and boast a 3” TFT screen – the largest screen on a mobile phone
in Japa
enterprise / email: Symbian expects huge growth in mobile e-mail accounts by
2010 and Symbian smartphones support all leading mobile email solutions in the
market including: Seven, Good, iAnywhere, BlackBerry Connect, Visto, and ActiveSync
for Microsoft Exchange, while 11 Symbian smartphones in the market today are WiFi
enabled
gaming: Symbian OS enables richer, graphically superior, high-performance premium
games that can take advantage of the latest mobile hardware acceleration technologies.
This year has seen the launch of Symbian smartphones, such as the Sony Ericsson
P990 and the Nokia N93, which incorporate 3D hardware acceleration. Game developers
can use open industry standards, such as OpenGL ES, to deliver cutting-edge 3D
graphics hardware accelerated action.
social media: Symbian smartphones are the perfect data acquisition device and
enable immediate, effortless sharing of content with solutions such as Shozu from
Cognima (users average 20 picture/video uploads per month) and Peerbox from Nareos
(peer-to-peer legal file sharing, search, and on-air song recognition).
Nigel Clifford said:
“Our goals are to attract the mid-range market where big volumes lie, to support
local markets and partners in developing economies, and to help enable the coolest
looking and best performing multimedia devices. These are ambitious goals, but
Symbian is the company best placed to achieve all of them. I am confident we can
deliver on these and enhance people’s lifestyles as a result.”
About Symbian
Symbian is a software licensing company that develops and licenses Symbian OS,
the market leading open operating system for advanced, data-enabled mobile phones,
also known as smartphones.
Symbian licenses Symbian OS to the world’s leading handset manufacturers and
has built close co-operative business relationships with leading companies across
the mobile industry. During H1 2006, 24 million Symbian smartphones were sold
worldwide to over 250 major network operators, bringing the total number of Symbian
OS phones shipped to 82.8 million.
Symbian is hosting The Symbian Smartphone Show, 17-18 October 2006, at ExCel,
in London, UK. For more information or to register or visit http://www.symbiansmartphoneshow.com/2006/
Symbian has its headquarters in London, United Kingdom with offices in the United
States, Europe (England and Sweden (UIQ Technology AB)), Israel and Asia (India,
P.R. China, Korea, and Japan). For more information, please visit www.symbian.com
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