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Apple iPhone vs. Google Android: Machine vs. Platform

By Erik Sherman | Nov 10, 2009

We hear a lot about the iPhone and various handsets sporting Android 1.0 — make that 2.0 — duking it out, with the Palm Pre limping along somewhere behind. But that’s the market struggle on the surface, there’s another battle going on: whether mobile will be ruled by device or platform. And history suggests that the natural winner will be platform, much to the pleasure of Google and eventual dismay of Apple.

This isn’t a feature slug-out where only the well-positioned survives. The mobile space fight more resembles the personal computer space in the early years, where IBM established a category and both Microsoft and Digital Research wrestled to create the default operating system. At the same time, Apple had a closed system, hardware and software all under its thumb. I think we’re seeing a similar scenario play out today.

There are some significant differences. For example, Apple is out in the lead early in the race. But in the long run, that isn’t going to be enough. The issues are economics and scalability. There are too many people in the world who will want units without having to pay a premium price. That’s why the openly available platform is going to win. It’s too cheap and well-developed for the hardware manufacturers, who, as one expert in cost management for consumer electronics companies told me, work on shaving fractions of a cent off per-unit costs.

And how can a company like Google afford this economic advantage? Online ads. When I mentioned the other day about Eric Schmidt saying that the company wanted to avoid Microsoft’s mistakes, I failed to mention something else he said in the Fox Business interview: Google can give away Android because “we make money, and lots of it, it turns out, from advertising on mobile phones.” Not will make money, but do make money. Google can infinitely leverage its development over many handset manufacturers and carriers without worrying about maintaining margins or overexposing itself. The more places Android is, the more money Google will make.

I also realized that Google has a tremendous advantage in the way it reports revenue. Ad revenue is all in one bucket, with no differentiation among platforms. As its numbers have shown at least a little growth during tough economic times, many — myself included — have assumed that they were doing a bit better than keeping par on search ads. But what if they weren’t? What if that had gone down and the “lots” of mobile advertising dollars have more than backfilled the drop? You can tell what the iPhone means to Apple, but Android’s fiscal importance to Google is like the Purloined Letter: invisible and in plain sight, all at the same time.

More manufacturers will turn to Google — or maybe a competitor like Intel or Symbian, though they don’t seem to be keeping pace at the moment — and eventually it will win the handset wars because, as happened in the PC wars, Apple cannot and will not be everywhere.

Image via stock.xchng user rubenam, site standard license.

Erik Sherman is a freelance journalist whose work has appeared in Newsweek, the New York Times Magazine, Technology Review, the Financial Times, Chief Executive, and other publications. Follow him on Twitter.

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  •  
    1

    Jeffbrandt

    11/10/09 | Report as spam

    Why doctors should choose Google Android over the iPhone for medical apps

  •  
    2

    rvassar

    11/10/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Apple iPhone vs. Google Android: Machine vs. Platform

    Stick with blogging. You are not going anywhere else. To
    compare the old 'PC DOS' market with the current Smartphone
    saga is simplistic and just wrong. Just look at Dell these days
    and compare with Apple. Look at the MP3 market. What
    happened with the cheap devices there competing against the
    'premium priced' iPod? What happens when (not if) the iPhone is
    put on Verizon's wonderful network (that doesn't allow
    simultaneous voice and data?) Chances are you'll be eating your
    words in 12-18 months.

  •  
    3

    AdanC

    11/10/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Apple iPhone vs. Google Android: Machine vs. Platform

    The iPhone 3G is available at $99 and the 3GS is going for
    $199 and $299, at these prices they are not cheap then I
    don't know what is.

    The main determinants of the winner will be ease of use,
    functions and a great service support.

    Apple wouldn't be repeating their mistake of the 70's and I
    wonder why most Apple bashers, er, tech bloggers failed to
    see this.

  •  
    4

    ErikSherman

    11/10/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Apple iPhone vs. Google Android: Machine vs. Platform

    rvassar, compare the Mac market to the Windows PC market. If you don't see that Windows ended up owning the market share, then I guess there's not much to talk about. The non-premium devices ultimately won. I know that Apple die-hards like to think that their preferences will eventually sway everyone, but I think that's pretty unrealistic.

    AdanC, Apple is already repeating its pattern of the 70s, 80s, and 90s. If ease of use were all, then the market would be completely different than it is - and to assume that Android-based devices won't get a whole lot better is pretty naive.

  •  
    5

    peter02l

    11/11/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Apple iPhone vs. Google Android: Machine vs. Platform

    ErikSherman,

    Read rvassar's comment again. You cannot use that
    comparison. Anyone can go buy a motherboard, a box, a hard
    drive, and a couple of sticks of RAM and slap together a PC.
    You cannot do that with a smartphone. A phone also requires
    service from a carrier which by the way is the bulk of the cost
    for its use. A PC doesn't.

    Also why do you conveniently make no references to Microsoft
    in the smartphone business. You say "Apple is out in the lead
    early in the race". Do you forget that Microsoft had a 10 year
    lead on Apple with Windows Mobile and with the exact business
    plan that you are suggesting will will in the long run. Now all
    their hardware partners are abandoning them. This strategy
    also failed miserably in the mp3 player business.

    Your PC/Mac analogy is totally wrong. Your use of terms like
    "Apple die-hards" does nothing to further your argument. And I
    think you show your naivet? here by suggesting that only
    Android-based devices will get a whole lot better, and failing to
    point out that Apple will not be standing still.

    Apple's got this smartphone hardware business down to a
    science now. Using the experience they have gotten from the
    iPod, their manufacturing and parts procurement expertise
    allows then to make margins that competitors can't match. The
    way they buy memory, displays, and other key components,
    create shortages for other manufacturers, who have to pay
    higher prices. Check out the early sales estimates for the
    Driod. 100,000 in the first weekend. Today, Orange UK sold
    30,000 iphones in 8 hours (by 3 o'clock in the afternoon) and
    they were still expecting more sales in the evening. That is in
    one day! in UK!. Driod, on the other had has had the "iCan't"
    and "There is a map for that" ads running leading up to its
    release. It is being offered (and is backed by) the largest
    wireless provider in the U.S. and supposedly the best 3G
    phone service and coverage. I don't know how one-sided or
    biased you are, but there is nothing so far that suggests this is
    going to be anything like the Mac/PC scenario of the 80s and
    90s.

    You should also read about the sentiments of Android
    developers before passing judgement:
    http://androidandme.com/2009/10/news/google-fails-to-
    address-app-storage-issue-with-droid-and-android-2-0/

  •  
    6

    ErikSherman

    11/11/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Apple iPhone vs. Google Android: Machine vs. Platform

    peter02l, this has nothing to do with buildling your own machines. It has everythign to do with broad-scale economics. The vast majority of people do not own iPhones and they won't in the future because Apple's business model does not lend itself to that approach. I made no references to Microsoft because a) I have before, and b) I'm using the Apple/Google comparison as a form of synecdoche, where the part stands for the whole. It's not Droid versus iPhone so much as mass market platform versus controlled device/software combination. When you take handsets altogether, platform definitely wins over specific device. Features will get pushed down and that disparity will continue. Maybe it will be Android. Or maybe it will be some other platform. But unless Apple gets beyond owning all aspects, it's not going to be the iPhone OS. Because it's also not about features so much as features introduced widely enough to enough people at a price low enough that most will buy. I'm also not saying that Apple disappears by any means.

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