Some thoughts on WWDC (and) 2012
I’d like to share a few thoughts on Apple’s WWDC 2012 announcements. I think we can finally say that iOS 6 is evolutionary and Apple takes care of its entire ecosystem.
iOS 6
Evolutionary, not revolutionary. The sixth generation of Apple’s mobile operating system represents an enhanced major release. The improvements are evident in the eyes of the users that will notice new features, new useful options and pixel-perfect finishing touches that are the result of an obsessive attention to detail. The improvements are evident in the eyes of the developers that will finds a ton of awesome APIs (currently under NDA) that they’ll definitely want to start using in their apps.
And requests like Siri support and Notification Center widgets for third-party apps? Inter-app communication? Multitasking rethink? Home screen redesign? Not yet. Apple is focusing on polishing the experience as we know it and creating a mature ecosystem.
Ecosystem
Until two years ago, it seemed that Apple had forgotten Mac OS X, but in reality was just concentrated on building a strong breakthrough mobile platform for the post-PC era. Apple is not losing interest in the Mac platform, but plans to strengthen its ecosystem all together (iOS, OS X and iCloud). A year ago at WWDC 2011, Steve Jobs presented iOS 5 (a huge improvement), Lion (the iOS-ification of OS X) and introduced iCloud (the key element of the ecosystem evolution). In 2012 Apple unveiled Mountain Lion (the unification of iOS and OS X) and announced annual OS X release cadence, just like iOS. Today we see an iCloud-ification of both platforms.
2012
So what? In 2012, the challenge is not to build the most advanced mobile or desktop operating system, but the most advanced ecosystem. Hardware, software and services have never been as integrated as they are today. Amazon and Samsung are creating their own ecosystem on top of Android. Microsoft is behind in the mobile OS market, but its desktop OS still remains the standard for PCs and is preparing the tablet-laptop convergence with the upcoming Windows 8. The post-PC era has just begun, the tablet (the very real Post-PC device) market is just beginning to take off and will be huge, the ecosystem war is under way.
iOS 5 Tech Talk World Tour in Rome
On October 20, Apple announced the dates and cities for its iOS 5 Tech Talk World Tour 2011, giving developers from around the world the opportunity to speak with and learn from Apple’s own engineers in nine cities on three continents. The nine cities include Berlin, London, Rome, Beijing, Seoul, São Paulo, New York City, Seattle, and Austin. iOS Developer Program members only and limited to those who got a confirmation from Apple.
Steve Jobs’ legacy
Thanks Steve for teaching us…
- …the difference between ‘good enough’ and better
- …that people are at the centre of technology
- …to think first about what is desirable to users and then to consider what’s possible with technology
- …to focus on what truly matters and to keep it simple
- …we can’t connect the dots forward, only backward
- …the difference between a leader and a follower
- …to believe in ourselves and push our life forward
- …to think that we can change the world
- …that “innovation is not about saying yes to everything, it’s about saying NO to all but the most crucial features”
- …that design is not just “how it looks like and feels like, design is how it works”
- …not to waste our time living someone else’s life
- …the importance of quality and attention to detail
- …that our imagination can become real through passion and determination
- …to “keep looking, don’t settle”
- …that compromise is a choice, not a requirement
- …to see things differently
We’ll miss you.
Apple iPhone’s Business Model
Apple iPhone’s Business Model is the title of an essay that I wrote for a “Business Models for Information Technology” course (Master in Computer Engineering at Sapienza, University of Rome) in Fall 2009.
Abstract
This paper traces the history of the first three generations of the iPhone by analyzing in detail the strategies and business plans used by Apple for the iPhone platform. The work includes the assessment of the data supported by graphs and numbers, the study of the key factors of rapid growth, the individuation and illustration of the various business models over the years, the reasons for the success of the App Store and the future threats.
Download: “Apple iPhone’s Business Model” essay