You're viewing an article in iPO's historic archive vault. Here, we've preserved the comments and how the site looked along with the article. Use this link to view the article on our current site: Should Apple Build its Own iTunes Cell Phone?

News

Should Apple Build its Own iTunes Cell Phone?

Even as Apple introduced the iTunes-equipped ROKR cell phone from Motorola on Wednesday, pundits continued to wonder whether the company would continue licensing the popular music software to cell phone makers or make the foray into the handset design and manufacturing business.

John Shinal, writing for MarketWatch, quotes Piper Jaffray analyst Gene Munster as saying: "If Apple pursues more relationships like the Motorola one, it will have missed an opportunity." While Apple will get a lot of exposure, Munster said that "from a revenue standpoint, the phone is a non-event for Apple."

On the other hand, NPD's Neil Strother told Mr. Shinal that "Apple would be crazy to try and build its own handset. It's a brutal, global business." With hundreds of millions of cell phones sold annually, Apple selling its own "would be a fairly large departure for the company, not to mention a huge distraction," Mr. Shinal writes.

With Microsoft desperate to get into the MP3 business in some way, whether through portable music players or through cell phones, Mr. Shinal says Apple should look at its own history to decide what to do. With Microsoft dominating the computer business by licensing Windows to manufacturers and Apple holding on to less than 5% of that market, "does Apple really want to become a phone maker in competition with Nokia and others?" Mr. Shinal asks.

"Much more likely," he writes, "Jobs has learned from history and has decided to play with the handset giants, rather than against them."

8 comments from the community.

You can post your own below.

+ show options

Your current settings, click to change: Sort Oldest First, Show Guest Posts, Hide Community Stats

Tiger said:

member since 17 Jun 2003 with 1018 posts, unranked, send him a message or view his profile

No,

Enough with the hardware.

Don't make the product, make it better

(Thanks BASF)

Quote this post ↓

A guest said: (hide)

how can you make it better without making one?

The should make a wifi ichat phone or some shiznet like that.

Quote this post ↓

A guest said: (hide)

Apple should design the EXTERIOR of the phone, and leave all else to the handset makers.

Apple are DESIGN experts, not cellphone guts experts. They should stick to what they're good at, while letting Moto, Nokia, Samsung, et al do what they're good at.

And at some point, Apple should simply sell the iTunes client to whomever, whether or not Apple had any say in the hardware or form facdtor design of the phone, so that iTunes is spread as broadly as possible throughout the billion-plus user cell phone world.

Quote this post ↓

A guest said: (hide)

One look at the Moto phone and it is obvious that they needed Apple's design talents. Hopefully they will get them when they come out with the next generation.

Quote this post ↓

A guest said: (hide)

I agree the Moto phone is not an exciting product for Apple. They should pair up with someone who is interested in making an interesting product. Use Apples design team. Put a real iPod in the thing. Make it sync (via Bluetooth) with the calendar and addressbook. Allow for input to the calendar and addressbook that will sync back to the computer. Let the camera pics sync with iPhoto. This is a product I will pay extra for. Stuffing a shuffle into a regular cell phone is not exciting.

Quote this post ↓

loki said:

member since 22 Dec 2004 with 37 posts, unranked, send him a message or view his profile

I'm sure Jonathan Ives has wet dreams about the design potential of mobile phones. Apple should design the handsets and let other manufacturers license them for production and distribution through their pre-existing channels. It would be a win-win for everyone, even the consumer for a change!!!

Quote this post ↓

Brutno said:

member since 28 Aug 2002 with 198 posts, unranked, send him a message or view his profile

I can see it now - phones with "Pod Ports" or "Nano Ports" on the back and an Apple-licensed click wheel on the front. The click wheel controls iTunes with the push of one phone button (similar to the current voice mail keys); otherwise it controls the phone's features. The phone would be a bit larger/heavier than a normal phone and the click wheel smaller than on the Nano, but these could be non-issues considering you would not have to carry two separate devices. The size of the music storage would depend on the size of the Nano you own. You would also have two batteries so phone battery life is independent of the iPod. Interesting.

Or...you could have a headless iPod Nano - no screen to save a bit of $ - but with increased storage as a result.

Quote this post ↓

dux5 said:

member since 02 Jul 2002 with 112 posts, unranked, send him a message or view his profile

Apple needs to buy RIM and Apple-ize the BlackBerry ... especially the user-interface and the features ... including the ability to play mp3/AAC. It already had chat.

Essentially, Apple needs to transform the cell phone into a killer device the way the iPod has turned the mp3 player into a killer device.

Quote this post ↓

Post Your Comments

  Remember Me

Not a member? Register now. You can post comments without logging in, but they'll show up as a "guest" post.


Please enter the word exactly as you see it in the image above. Registered users aren't prompted for this. Having trouble reading the image get a new one.