Nokia’s newly-announced e-mail phones are interesting, and I think one of them could be very successful.
The three new devices come with a bewildering array of mail client options, including RIM, Good, Visto, Seven, and Nokia’s Business Center (which I believe is the software that syncs directly to Exchange). I wish I’d had a mail client on the market, they probably would have licensed from me as well.
I think the client that matters most in the short term is RIM, because a lot of companies and operators have standardized on the RIM server and have been asking for RIM-compatible devices. Unfortunately for Nokia, in the US what they’ve been asking for is RIM-compatible Windows Mobile and Palm OS devices, and Nokia’s devices are on Symbian, which has basically no traction in the US.
I’m very pleased, though, that they didn’t try to tart these things up with a bunch of multimedia features. The people who want e-mail phones are, for the most part, very distinct from the people who want entertainment phones. Look at RIM -- they’re a crummy device for almost everything except e-mail, and yet they’re the leader in the category. If I had my choice, I wouldn’t have even built cameras into the Nokia devices, but many operators require cameras these days, so Nokia probably had no choice.
Anyway, the three devices are the E60, a candybar phone; the E61, a minitablet with keyboard; and the E70, which has a flip-over keyboard. I don’t expect much from the E60 -- an e-mail phone without a keyboard is like a bicycle without handlebars. (Yeah, I know they exist, but how well do they sell?)
The E61 is being compared online to the Treo, but actually it’s a pretty slavish RIM Blackberry clone, just like the Motorola Q and the HP Mobile Messenger. I guess it makes sense to target RIM’s ID, since Blackberries outsell the Treo by a wide margin. But all of these RIM-like designs are too wide to be held comfortably in one hand by many people, and I think that’s going to be a barrier to wide adoption. It’s not really a comfortable replacement for a mobile phone.
The device I like best is the E70, which picks up the flipover keyboard design of the Nokia 6822. The cool thing about this design is that when the keyboard’s closed, it looks like a regular mobile phone and you can hold it to your face fairly comfortably. But when the keyboard’s open, you have a pretty roomy keyboard in which you can type easily with two thumbs. It’s much roomier than the Treo’s keyboard.
Downside: You can’t type one-handed while strap-hanging on the subway.
The thing that bewilders me about the E70 is that it’s triband instead of quad band. That means you can’t travel with it and be confident that it’ll work around the world. E-mail phones are professional road warrior power tools, and you need to make the user confident that they’ll be well connected wherever they go. The Treo is quad band, and I assume Palm will make an issue of that when selling against the E70.
Nevertheless, the E70 impresses me. I think typing will be faster on its keyboard, and the RIM client will be a big selling point (assuming it works, a big if). I think it has good prospects in Europe. Will its advantages be enough to overcome US IT managers’ distaste for the Symbian OS? That’s going to be an interesting one to watch.
michael, what are your thoughts on the forthcoming sony ericsson phones: P990 and M600?
ReplyDelete>>what are your thoughts on the forthcoming sony ericsson phones: P990 and M600?
ReplyDeleteThanks for asking. My first thought is that I ought to study them more before I comment, but I don't know when I'll have time to do a deep dive on them. So let me label this as first reactions only...
Although I like the idea of a device that transforms from small screen to large, the p800/900 series has never really grabbed me. In particular, putting the keyboard on the back of the flipper feels like a very awkward compromise -- the ergonomics are not as nice as RIM or Treo because your thumbs are so far down below the center of gravity of the device. Looking at the spec sheet for the p990, I think I see a lot more features loaded into a device whose identity was already a little fuzzy.
Sales of the p800 plateaued soon after it was launched. I don't think it and its follow-ons ever really reached beyond technophiles.
The p900 showed up in a couple of focus groups I once did, and its large screen attracted some people who need to work with a lot of data on their phones. But to work with data, you need many third party apps, and UIQ is far behind Palm OS and PPC in that regard. So to me it's the wrong hardware for the OS it's running.
The m600 looks more promising to me, because they focused on making it thin and e-mail centric. I applaud them for leaving out the camera; you don't need it for communication-centric users. But I need to know more about how well the e-mail solution will work, and I don't yet understand how the two-lettered keyboard will work (there are two letters on each key). It didn't go over too well when RIM offered something similar.
What do you think?