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Article from SFGate.

“It’s been a big couple of weeks in mobile. Verizon Wireless finally got the iPhone. Hewlett-Packard unveiled the first fruits of its Palm purchase last year. Nokia, the world’s biggest maker of handsets, abandoned its once-dominant Symbian mobile software system and demoted itself to a kind of glorified contract manufacturer of Microsoft-powered devices.

The struggle for mobile dominance has entered a new phase. Why would Nokia throw out Symbian, with its 37 percent market share, in favor of software with less than one-seventh of that? Because recently hired Chief Executive Officer Stephen Elop is convinced that Microsoft has better odds of going up against the four other mobile powers – Apple, Google, Research In Motion, and HP – and making its new Windows Phone 7 software a center of gravity for the world’s programmers, manufacturers, and consumers.

“The game has changed from a battle of devices to a war of ecosystems,” Elop told investors at a recent London news conference.

Actually, it’s the same game that created the most valuable franchises in tech history, from IBM to Microsoft to Facebook. All successfully established themselves as “platforms,” in which countless entrepreneurs and programmers developed products and applications that gave value to customers and profitability to shareholders – sucking oxygen away from rivals all the while.

Platform leaders

In the 1960s, IBM trounced Sperry and other mainframe manufacturers by creating a soup-to-nuts stack of hardware, software and services.

In PCs, Microsoft erased Apple’s early lead by signing up hardwaremakers to create cheap machines, and software companies to develop Windows versions of everything from word processors to Tetris.

Facebook vanquished social networks such as MySpace by repositioning itself as a platform – a decision that led to the creation of gamemaker Zynga and other app companies that keep Facebook’s 500 million users hanging around.

What’s different this time is scale.

“Mobile is the biggest platform war ever,” said Bill Whyman, an analyst with International Strategy & Investment. More smart phones were sold than PCs in the fourth quarter, and sales should reach $120 billion this year. That doesn’t count billions more in mobile services, ads, and e-commerce.

This war will probably last for some time, too. Unlike with PCs, where the unquestioned victor – Microsoft – quickly emerged and enjoyed years of near monopoly, no one has a divine right to dominance in mobile. Microsoft crushed its competition by forcing people to make a choice. There were far more software applications for PCs, and most didn’t work on Macs. The more Microsoft-powered machines out there, the more people wrote software for them, the more people bought them, and the bigger the whole system became. Economists have a name for that phenomenon: “network effects.”

Appealing products

All cell phones can talk to each other and handle the same websites and e-mail systems, so winning means making products that function more effectively and appealingly. That sums up Apple’s success.

Steve Jobs figured out long ago that when people spend their own money, they’ll pay for something a lot nicer than the unsexy gear the cheapskates in corporate procurement choose. While others competed on price, Apple focused on making its products reliable and easy to use. Once customers buy an iPhone and start investing in iTunes songs and apps, they tend to stick with the system and keep buying – even though there’s no proprietary lock on the proverbial door.

Apple’s huge sales volume makes carriers and suppliers more likely to agree to its terms. The software that powers everything Apple makes – all variations of the Mac operating system OS X – is as intuitive to developers as Angry Birds is to app shoppers.

The result is economic leverage of staggering power. To create a blockbuster, Apple doesn’t need to spend billions on a start-from-scratch moon-shot of a development project. It just needs to tweak a previous hit.

Take the iPad, which is in many ways a large iPod touch. Apple won’t say how much the iPad cost to develop. Consider these numbers, though: In the year that ended Sept. 30, during which Apple introduced the iPad and the iPhone 4, the company spent $1.8 billion on research and development. Over the same period, Apple’s revenue increased by $22.3 billion. Nokia spent three times as much as Apple on R&D – $5.86 billion – and increased revenue by just $1.5 billion. No wonder that Apple, whose share of total global mobile-phone sales is only 4.2 percent, gets more than half the profit generated by the industry, according to research firm Asymco.

Fast-growing Android

Even Google, Apple’s mightiest rival, got only a $5 billion increase in sales on its $3.4 billion R&D budget. It does have plenty to show for its efforts, though: Its Android platform is growing at a blistering pace. In the fourth quarter, according to research firm Canalys, twice as many Android devices shipped as iPhones.

“Google is being far more aggressive in building its platform than Microsoft ever was,” says Bill Gurley, a partner at Benchmark Capital.

Barring big surprises, the other contenders – RIM, HP, and Microsoft – are in for a slog: too dependent on mobile devices to give up, yet lacking the tools to make much progress. All lost market share in 2010 and have far fewer apps available for their devices.”

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Here is an interesting newsbit from SFgate.com

“Microsoft’s cell phone rebound begins today with the release of two new phones aimed at social networking fiends.

Kin One and Kin Two are Microsoft’s play for the generation of messaging users who are forever connected to friends through platforms like Facebook, MySpace and Twitter, what some call Generation Upload.

The two phones are now available online at www.verizonwireless.com and will be available for purchase in Verizon Wireless stores May 13. The Kin One will sell for $49.99 with a $100 rebate and 2-year contract while the Kin Two will sell for $99.99 with the same requirements.

I’ve been playing with the Kin One for half a day and it feels like a fresh approach to messaging phones that should complement, along with its bigger brother, Microsoft’s upcoming Windows phone 7 smart phones.

First some basics: The Kin One sports a 2.6-inch screen, a 5 megapixel camera, a portrait slide-out keyboard, a Tegra APX 2600 processor (like in the Zune HD) with GPS, Wi-Fi, an accelerometer and 4GB of storage. The Kin Two has a 3.4-inch screen, a horizontal slide-out keyboard, an 8 megapixel camera, the ability to run 720p video, 8GB of storage along with the same processor, Wi-Fi, GPS and accelerometer of its smaller sibling.

The home screen called Kin Loop is a stream of tiles representing updates from your friends and RSS feeds. Swipe to the right and you can jump to tiles of up to 51 of your favorite friends. To the left of the home screen is your list of apps.

Where things get interesting is the Kin Spot, a circle on the bottom of the screen that remains in almost every screen. When you come across an update, a web page, a picture or video you want to share or upload, you just do a long-press on it and then drag it to the Spot. Then you decide who you want to send it to. From your favorites list or contacts page, you can drag anyone into the Spot and then decide how they’ll receive it. You can e-mail it to them or text message them. Or you can broadcast out your update to your social networks.

Apps like Tweetdeck on the iPhone let you do some of this stuff but using the Spot is fun and it works across your entire phone.

Another innovative thing about the Kin devices is that almost everything you do is backed up to the Kin Studio, which can be accessed from any browser. You can see all your communications you’ve had over the past month, week or day and you can see all your pictures and videos (up to a minute long) you’ve captured. You can also arrange the layout of your Kin device from the Studio.

The Kin devices also have full HTML browser running a version of Internet Explorer with multi-touch for zooming. The media player is built off of Microsoft’s Zune media player, with all of its elegant swooshing menus. The phone has a dedicated search button for searches on your phone, general Bing searches and Bing searches near you. The e-mail client can handle the usual Google, Yahoo, Hotmail as well as Exchange support.”

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