Showing posts with label Google. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Google. Show all posts

Monday, April 15, 2013

Laying the ground for a second coming

After years of struggling with its CDMA technology in India, Qualcomm is looking for business avenues in the smartphone space. However, its real potential seems to lie elsewhere.

The Indian telecom industry has been witnessing an unprecedented fall in subscriber additions of late. For the last 4 months, the net additions have been less than 10 million every month and still descending on monthly basis; taking the total to 611.75 million by August 2011 (COAI). However, low cost handset makers are getting upbeat about revolutionising the 2nd largest telecom market in the world even after over half of it is taken.

Riding on the wave created by Google’s free operating system Android, which surpassed Nokia’s outdated operating system Symbian in 2010, even chipset manufacturing companies like Qualcomm are eager to have their share of the pie in Android’s feast, which is all set to cross 49% market share by 2012 (Gartner). The worldwide smartphone market is expected to grow by more than 55% yoy in 2011 and around 472 million phones will be shipped through the year. It is projected that shipments will reach 982 million by 2015 with Apple’s iPhones & Samsung’s Galaxys leading the segment currently.

Many OEMs naturally believe in the low cost handset market for an emerging market like India. Qualcomm CEO Paul Jacobs shares the view. After facing significant reversals in India due to the far lower success rate of CDMA services, due to which even its largest customer RCom switched a few years back to a dual service portfolio, Qualcomm is looking to make amends. In 1990, Qualcomm pioneered the designing of CDMA-based cellular base stations, which has been its forte. Being the OEM of mobile phone chipsets, (Qualcomm CDMA technologies contributed 61% of its revenues in FY 2010), Qualcomm was once able to derive huge royalties from the companies it served with CDMA (globally, LG and Samsung contributed over 10% each in the same period). But India is very low in contrbution despite significant investments by the company.

The San Diego-based company’s strategy is to leverage the expanding availability of 3G services (as its core competency is producing 3G compatible chipsets) and after successfully tapping the biggest handset market of the world (China accounted for 29% of Qualcomm’s revenues of $10.99 billion for the year ending September 2010), the company has now decided to follow the footsteps of its Chinese competitors and bring out a sub-$100 phone with a Qualcomm chip in order to cater to the needs of the price sensitive yet feature conscious Indian market. Huawei and ZTE have already launched Qualcomm chip powered Android handsets in that range in China.


Source : IIPM Editorial, 2012.
An Initiative of IIPM, Malay Chaudhuri
 
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Wednesday, December 12, 2012

Yahoo! to Boohoo!

Yahoo! had a chance to grow & survive. It ‘had’!

So what’s the biggest mistake that Yahoo! ever made? Well, allow us to rephrase that... what are the biggest mistakes made by Terry Semel and his successor Jerry Yang? Allow us to reflect back on what happened in 2001. That year, Yahoo’s chief, Terry Semel met the co-founders & co-Presidents of Google – Larry Page and Sergey Brin – to discuss the acquisition of Google. Semel offered them much lower than the $5 billion, that the co-founders asked for. As a justification, Semel stated that “no one could truly value Google,” and that there was “no way he would shell out such a hefty amount” for the search-engine start-up. Eight years later, Google commands a market value of $121.1 billion, while Yahoo!, a lamentable $19 billion! Then there was Semel’s successor, Jerry Yang, who in 2007 brushed aside Microsoft’s bid for Yahoo! for a mind-blowing $46 billion.


Source : IIPM Editorial, 2012.
An Initiative of IIPMMalay Chaudhuri

For More IIPM Info, Visit below mentioned IIPM articles.

Wednesday, September 05, 2012

Intel inside: For how long?

Could technology be weakening the ability of our minds to learn?

Movies like Inception are setting the box-office cash-registers ringing for their portrayal of how technology can be used to invade our dreams. At the same time, there is a real-world debate on how the constant presence of technology is weakening the ability of our minds to learn. The American technology expert and author, Nicholas Carr recently mentioned that Google may be responsible for us “losing our ability to engage in more attentive ways of thinking.” This isn’t the first time that Carr has raised this question, whose 2004 book, Does IT Matter?, raised a furore among top executives from HP, Microsoft and others. In 2008, he wrote an article titled – Is Google Making Us Stoopid? – where he highlighted that the Internet may have adverse effects on our minds’ capacity for concentration. In the same vein was his recent interview, where he proposed that Google should make its products tougher to use in order to give our brains some exercise. His stand contradicts Google’s philosophy, which is ‘to organise the world’s information and make it universally accessible and useful.’

Carr’s discontent is not with Google alone; he has expressed his worry about the ease with which we have information available. Prolonged and unchecked Internet usage could cause Attention Deficit Disorder, Internet addiction, or even social isolation. We are also getting used to reading information in snippets from various sites instead of spending time on a single web page. Prof. Maryanne Wolf at the Eliot-Pearson Department of Child Development at Tufts, has expressed her concern over the effect technology could have on the reading abilities of the coming generation. “The problem of a less potentiated reading brain becomes urgent in the discussion about technology. We human beings are not just the product of what we read, but how we read. The essential question is: how well will we preserve the critical capacities of the present expert reading brain as we move to the digital reading brain of the next generation?” said Wolf.


Source : IIPM Editorial, 2012.
For More IIPM Info, Visit below mentioned IIPM articles.
 
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