Applications Are Key
Palm Pre Is Still Behind the iPhone When It Comes to Apps
The iPhone is the leader in
the smartphone space. It provides a compelling experience with the help
of its outstanding software and functional touch-screen. It also extends
its feature-set with the help of a variety of applications -- 50,000 at last
count -- that range from productivity to gaming.
Realizing that, a variety of iPhone competitors followed suit. T-Mobile's
G1, a Google Android-based device, sporting a touch-screen, has a Marketplace
where users can download applications. Many of those apps (but certainly
not all) were ported from the iPhone. RIM's BlackBerry App World is also
a fine place to find applications for the company's BlackBerry Bold or
BlackBerry Storm. Like the Android Marketplace, RIM's BlackBerry App
World isn't as big as the Apple App Store, but it's growing. Microsoft is on its way to releasing an app store of its own
for its Windows Mobile operating system. It's not available
yet, but the company promises it will compete on the same level as Apple's
store.
But there's one more company -- Palm -- that has yet to provide that added
value to users. Although the company's Pre is being touted as one of the
best iPhone competitors on the market, that company uses a platform called
webOS to bring apps to the product. There's just one problem: developers
that have been easily porting their applications from one platform to another
can't do that with the Pre.
Although the Pre is a fine device, it's an anomaly in today's market.
Unlike its competitors, which have thousands of applications available on their
platforms, Palm's Pre has just 30 applications available in its App
Catalog. And unfortunately, there's little chance that Palm will be
bringing more apps to the device anytime soon.
Palm's SDK deployment has slowed. Last
week, the company's Developer Community manager, Chuq Von Rospach, said that
although Palm wants to bring the SDK to developers quickly so they can start
developing for webOS, "the software and the developer services to support
it just aren't ready yet." Palm expects the SDK to be available by
the end of the summer.
Is that too late? Palm's launch wasn't an unbridled success. According to the company, it sold 50,000 Palm Pre devices during its first
weekend of availability. Compare that to Apple's announcement that it sold more than 1 million iPhone 3G S units in its
first weekend of availability and it quickly becomes clear that Palm has some
work to do. But getting to work on that SDK is paramount.
Applications Are Key
As a device, the Palm Pre is a fine alternative to the iPhone. Its
multitasking features are second to none, it has a beautiful display, and its
touch-screen works just as well as the iPhone's. It's even priced
right. But it's the device's lack of applications that holds it
back. iPhone users can extend the functionality of their mobile
experience. They can enjoy a variety of features through the App Store
that they simply can't with the default applications.
That's not the case with the Pre. For the most part, what the user sees
when they start the Pre for the first time is what they get. And if those
30 applications just don't appeal to them, they have no chance of extending
that functionality. Something needs to be done.
Palm knows that. Von Rospach said in the same blog statement that Palm
will "begin publishing more content outside the early access program"
as soon as it can. It will also accelerate its program to get
"thousands" of developers creating applications as quickly as
possible.
It's a smart move. Without the support of applications, the value
proposition for users just isn't high enough. Enterprise customers won't
have the mobile business apps that could help them perform their basic
duties. And consumers who want mobile social networking apps or video
games will be disappointed with the Pre. While all their friends are
using touch-screen smartphones to communicate with others outside of SMS,
they'll be left wondering why they can't do the same. It's a real
problem.
If the Palm Pre is to survive in the highly competitive mobile phone market,
applications are the keys to success. Without them, the Pre will look
like a hobbled iPhone competitor. With them, it can compete on the same
level as the leader in the space.
But getting those applications to the device is step one. So far, there
is little chance that Palm will match the iPhone's 50,000 apps anytime
soon. And as more consumers see those apps and try them out in the store,
it will only be a matter of time before they pick the device with the best
applications. In that case, it will be the iPhone and not the Pre, that
will come out on top. For Palm, that could mean big trouble. And
possibly, the end of the company's mobile unit as we know it.
