Take a peek on Techmeme and you might think the only story in tech news is the upcoming and likely release of a Google Phone. Â I’m sure it will be decent enough but am starting to question the logic a bit given the rumor that the Nexus One as it seems to be called will be sold as an open device, yet on T-Mobile.
I’m definitely a fan of open. Â I absolutely prefer that my mobile devices not have restrictions based on operator business development initiatives and instead offer all that the hardware and OS can deliver. Â I just don’t see how this device is going to really make that much of a difference for the mainstream consumer – or for T-Mobile. Â According to the FCC leak the supported bands will be global and specifically TMO’s (1700) in the US.
If T-Mobile sells and supports the device it will really be a T-Mobile device. Â Even if you buy it elsewhere you will need to run it on T-Mobile (again in the US) to actually take advantage of the 3G services and why would you buy an advanced smartphone otherwise?
I would love to be a fly on the way at Verizon Wireless right now. Â They just spent gobs of cash launching the Droid which is strongly co-branded Google and has little to no Verizon anywhere. Â Maybe they jumped the gun on going for Droid so quickly when big G had this cooking (to compete) all along …
I’m wondering whether Google might be looking to upend the subsidy market by  taking on the cost directly in exchange for all the lovely data they track … assuming a Google phone is like the G1 in that you must have a Google Account for it to work.  I tend to agree with Ewan that this really is going to be a price play.  It’s unlikely that this will be the phone for me, and I do wonder who an open Android device is for just now … Looking forward to seeing how this all plays out.
Really? i heard it also supports the AT&T bandwidth, is that story false? http://bit.ly/68VncJ
From what I read earlier on Engadget, it was not going to support AT&T 3G bands … guess we'll have to wait and see. http://bit.ly/8Uk4z6
Google is moving down in the stack to challenge B2C opponents with an open architecture and new sets of standards. In creating a post-revenue business model, Google can only manage success if consumers accept a co-branding and outsourced manufactured device … NQ Logic recommends reading about the rest of the new Google's mobile strategy at http://www.nqlogic.com
Really? i heard it also supports the AT&T bandwidth, is that story false? http://bit.ly/68VncJ
From what I read earlier on Engadget, it was not going to support AT&T 3G bands … guess we'll have to wait and see. http://bit.ly/8Uk4z6
Google is moving down in the stack to challenge B2C opponents with an open architecture and new sets of standards. In creating a post-revenue business model, Google can only manage success if consumers accept a co-branding and outsourced manufactured device … NQ Logic recommends reading about the rest of the new Google's mobile strategy at http://www.nqlogic.com