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Nexus One leads Google to new frontier

Nexus One leads Google to new frontier

By:  Kathleen Lau  On: 06 Jan 2010 For: Computing Canada Creator
 

Google’s Nexus One high-end smart phone is more about the company’s changing role from software provider to managed device platform vendor, than it is about the hardware, said a Datamonitor analyst. But, it will have to run on other networks besides GSM to succeed, said an IDC Canada analyst

The hardware is not what is noteworthy about Google Inc.’s unveiling of its Nexus One high-end smart phone, rather it’s about the search engine mogul taking on the new role of managed device platform vendor, said one analyst.

 

The smart phone offering is not an earth-shattering addition to what’s already available on the high-end device market, but Google is taking a different approach to how it is offering the device by managing much more broadly the complete mobile user experience, said Adam Leach, U.K.-based devices practice lead with research firm Datamonitor.

 

The Nexus One “super phone” can be purchased online through a new Google Web page, using Google Checkout.

 

The Mountain View, Calif.-based company is not just playing the role of software provider as it did with the launch of the Android operating system, said Leach. Google is taking control of the end-to-end user experience from device procurement to delivering Web services, and is an approach that, he added, “creates customer relationships, delivers services, hardware and the whole package.”

 

Assuming the role of online phone retailer, Leach said will create a shift in the value chain and help Google “play a dominant role in the mind of the consumer,” said Leach.

 

Datamonitor believes managed device platforms will definitely be the distinguishing factor as high-end phones increasingly proliferate the market.

 

But although Google has admitted its online store foray is being tackled in baby steps, Leach said there are obviously lofty goals behind it all. Google Android was launched with a single device and has since become available for multiple devices in different countries and supported by different carriers, noted Leach. “We know they’ve got large ambitions,” he said.

 

Google has observed that taking a hands-off approach will only get it so far in the smart phone market, which is why it is throwing considerable weight behind the Android effort, said Kevin Restivo, Toronto-based senior analyst for worldwide mobile phone tracker with research firm IDC Corp.


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Kathleen Lau Kathleen Lau was a senior writer with ITWorldCanada.com and ComputerWorld Canada from December 2006 to August 2011.In her role as senior writer, she covered broadly technology news and issues r... more

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