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Subject: [IP] query for reporters All hail the new iPhone - Pittsburgh Tribune-Review




Begin forwarded message:

From: DV Henkel-Wallace <gumby@henkel-wallace.org>
Date: January 12, 2007 6:21:45 PM EST
To: "Brock N. Meeks" <bmeeks@cox.net>
Cc: David Farber <dave@farber.net>
Subject: Re: [IP] query for reporters All hail the new iPhone - Pittsburgh Tribune-Review

I think the question is more simple.

If you decide you can't start an MVNO for whatever reason you need a carrier on your side (even if you do you won't have 100% freedom on what phone you develop). You can't start out in opposition to carriers and still get one to sign up. So you have to pick an exclusive provider to start.

If you're going to design a phone then you might as well pick GSM (UMTS is hard, but there you are) for the greatest potential worldwide market. Changing wireless architecture isn't a drop-in process, at least today. For GSM in the USA there isn't much choice.

So Apple gets some traction without being frozen out by the carriers. Cingular gets the hope that people are driven to its network by the Apple name. Very simple.

Even if there's an additional financial consideration it will appear in the SEC filings IFF it's material...which right now it would be unlikely to be.


Far more interesting is a long-term unknown: Apple likes to differentiate its branding clearly. Thus it's the iTunes store and not, say, a Virgin Online Megastore. It will want to control its phone's behaviour to a far greater degree than does, say, Motorola. The carriers have been working to erode this manufacturer differentiation, and sadly (IMHO) have been succeeding. But with Apple in the mix: who will win?

-d



with Ockham's razor


From: "Brock N. Meeks" <bmeeks@cox.net>
Date: January 12, 2007 5:36:57 PM EST

It is curious why Jobs would hang the initial success of the iPhone on a
single carrier.  [...]  It could
very well be that Cingular has some kind of financial arrangement with Apple
[...]
There's nothing illegal in this type of transaction and I suppose if such a
deal has actually been made it would show up, somewhere, in Cingular's
quarterly earnings statements.



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