Coyote Tracks - Not a race, but a series
january 2012 by davidetarascibu
It’s just that the tide of Android devices is going to be primarily composed of “free with contract” uglies, not the kind of cool phones that compete with the iPhone. (Which is not to downplay cool Android phones, which I suspect will get more competitive, not less.)
iphone
ios
Android
Market
sh
january 2012 by davidetarascibu
The story of Fernforest and Petro Dale | asymco
january 2012 by davidetarascibu
Once upon a time there were some innovative farmers that developed a new hybrid crop that could satisfy the hunger of a growing population. This crop grew best in large farms which had to be situated far from where people lived. The food was so tasty and production could scale so quickly that it became necessary and possible to build a novel way to deliver this food to the population. The farmers built their own transportation network, which they called a “railway”.
Innovation
story
history
Market
business
sh
january 2012 by davidetarascibu
Apple’s commoditization discount | asymco
january 2012 by davidetarascibu
To be more precise, analysts value the wave of growth of every new product and heavily discount the post-growth phase assuming commoditization. There is no value assigned to Apple for extending market reach to the mass market.
apple
Market
business
Analysis
sh
january 2012 by davidetarascibu
∞ Apps are Critical
november 2011 by davidetarascibu
Even with all those reasons, I just can’t believe that there is still only one Android app that I can look at and say: “yes, that’s what I am talking about.”
Even if all the above reasons for not developing for Android are true, it would still seems highly unusual that I was only able to find one good app.
The best guess I have has to be that the “market share” is just not that high, thus not making it “worth” it for developers to make amazing apps for the platform.
android
ios
market
apps
sh
Even if all the above reasons for not developing for Android are true, it would still seems highly unusual that I was only able to find one good app.
The best guess I have has to be that the “market share” is just not that high, thus not making it “worth” it for developers to make amazing apps for the platform.
november 2011 by davidetarascibu
Is Innovation Valuable?
november 2011 by davidetarascibu
The premise of the stock market today is therefore that being innovative in technology is meaningless. Innovations are valuable but there is no such thing as an innovation process. If there was such a thing then we could measure it and put a number of its value. Until then innovation is nothing more than a spin of the roulette wheel.
apple
innovation
market
sh
november 2011 by davidetarascibu
Phone Tipping Point Countdown Reset
may 2011 by davidetarascibu
comScore’s latest survey data is in and the news is good.
In March an additional 3 million Americans became smartphone users. That translates to 700,000 every week or 100,000 every day switching from a non-smart or feature phone to a smartphone.
The smartphone is now in use by 31% of the phone users in the US. A year ago 80% of Americans did not use a smartphone. Today non-consumption is down to 69%.
It also means that only 19% more penetration remains before half of the population is using smartphones and that penetration is increasing at an average of 1.3% per month.
I reset my Phone Tipping Point countdown clock to reflect the new data.
I call it the Phone Tipping Point because it’s the moment when I expect we’ll stop using the word “smartphone”.
It’s nearly one year away.
Market
from google
In March an additional 3 million Americans became smartphone users. That translates to 700,000 every week or 100,000 every day switching from a non-smart or feature phone to a smartphone.
The smartphone is now in use by 31% of the phone users in the US. A year ago 80% of Americans did not use a smartphone. Today non-consumption is down to 69%.
It also means that only 19% more penetration remains before half of the population is using smartphones and that penetration is increasing at an average of 1.3% per month.
I reset my Phone Tipping Point countdown clock to reflect the new data.
I call it the Phone Tipping Point because it’s the moment when I expect we’ll stop using the word “smartphone”.
It’s nearly one year away.
may 2011 by davidetarascibu
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