I’m not so sure that the smart phone battle between Google and Apple isn’t exactly like the Windows vs. Mac battle of the 1990s. Jason D. O’Grady in ZDNet points out a number of distinct differences:
In the end, Google vs. Apple isn’t quite the same as Windows vs. Mac. Yet.
Europe’s financial instability seems to have infected Wall Street. From WSJ Online:
The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 225.06 points, or 2%, to 10926.77, its worst daily decline in both point and percentage terms since Feb. 4. The decline also represented the Dow’s fourth straight triple-digit point move, underscoring that volatility is returning after a long stretch of trading that had been defined by modest daily moves and light volume.
This will get worse before it gets better.
In another sign of the changes in Microsoft’s fortunes, the popular Internet Explorer browser, once boasting 95-percent market share, is now below 60-percent and falling quickly. NetMarketShare:
Microsoft’s browser dropped to 59.95 percent of web use in April after Google Chrome leapt half a point ahead to 6.73 percent in the same timeframe. Firefox and Safari also ate into Internet Explorer’s share with small gains that put them at 24.59 percent and 4.72 percent each.
Change is good. Good change is better.
Philip Elmer-DeWitt in Fortune:
If you buy the digital editions of Popular Science or TIME Magazine on the iPad, they cost $4.99 each — same as on the newsstand. However, one-year subscriptions to Popular Science (the paper magazine) are currently selling for $12 — or $1 an issue. And TIME subscriptions can be had for $20 — around 35¢ an issue.
Why the disparity? And, why so much money for a digital version vs. a paper version?
Because that’s what the market will bear — at least for now
With all the verbal sparring between Apple and Adobe regarding Flash videos, one important statistic floated quietly to the top. Most videos on the internet don’t use Flash’s proprietary codec. Most videos are the open standard H.264. Erick Schonfeld in TechCrunch:
So how much video exactly is available in H.264? The H.264 format went from 31 percent of all videos to 66 percent, and is now the largest format by far. Meanwhile, Flash is represented by Flash VP6 and FLV, which combined represent only 26 percent of all videos. That is down from a combined total of 69 percent four quarters ago. So the native Flash codecs and H.264 have completely flipped in terms of market share (Flash also supports H.264, however, but you don’t need a Flash player to watch H.264 videos).
Goodbye, Flash.
Marc Benioff, CEO of SalesForce in Fortune:
As we try to keep pace with these changes to a new computing industry, we are left with only two choices: innovate or die. Microsoft like DEC before it, and IBM before it, tried too long to hold on to its Windows model believing it was permanent in an industry of impermanence. But it didn’t work out that way. Google outsmarted Microsoft into the Internet, and it dominated the next Internet paradigm. Now Apple is the clear winner in the new mobile paradigm.
The only constant is change.
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