17 Mar 2008
Mobile devices are ubiquitous nowadays, and none has caught the public imagination recently quite as much as Apple’s iPhone. But what was the iPhone equivalent five years ago? A delve into the archive shows that it was the Pocket PC. I found a review of a new NEC Pocket PC from March 2003 that is frightening in the way it shows how the scale of things has changed.
The iPhone itself, now being dressed in pin-stripe and bowler hat for its new life as a “business” device, is really not that much different from a Pocket PC with a phone in it with two remarkable exceptions.
The first, of course, is video. At a recent convention, semiconductor firm Broadcom showed me handheld video players capable of running full HD resolution video games for five hours, and all off a standard phone-size battery.
So the iPhone is still slightly behind the state of the art there, perhaps.
But the contrast between the iPhone and the Broadcom chip today is completely
eclipsed by the change in memory between NEC’s 2003 release and Apple’s latest
16GB iPhone.
I quote: “NEC’s new MobilePro 200E… with 64MB of memory. You’re unlikely to find
more than that as standard on any Pocket PC and it gives you plenty of room for
storing data and applications.”
Today, it would be quite a trick to find a device with only 64MB of memory. Chips that small simply aren’t worth fabricating except, perhaps, as tiny corners of other, larger bits of silicon. And even then, what would be the point of using 64MB instead of 1GB ?
But of course, the real change in the market is the move of users away from PDAs to smartphones, and as a result the astonishing decline in the Palm platform. The recent launch of the new Palm device, the Centro phone, generated almost no excitement. Amuse yourself with Google, and compare the number of news hits for the Centro and the iPhone.
And then, just to round it off, see how many news articles about the Pocket PC can be found.
Happy hunting.
Granted, the iPhone is enormously popular - what Apple device isn't?!
But to say that the Pocket PC is dead is incorrect. If someone does a search for Pocket PC as you suggest, they will find countless hits from enthusiast sites to developer sites and an absolute bounty of applications available.
Currently, the Sprint Mogul has the distinction of being the fastest device - in terms of data speed - of any mobile device by any carrier. It is a powerhouse that I will put up against the iPhone any day of the week!
There will always be Apple enthusiasts, but don't dismiss us Windows Mobile affectionados! We are plentiful!
WindowsMobileLouisville.com
Posted by: Matt Coddington 17 Mar 2008
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