It has been a very interesting 24 hours!! As Apple's big day in the US is at hand (and people are also due to receive their pre-ordered iphone 6), Apple is also on the prowl to refresh its' iPAD within the next thirty days. This is as Tim Cook went after Google in a major way by underscoring how Google's disregard for privacy is ever so prevalent. But this brutal indictment of Apple itself was a testament to the continued challenge Apple will have to insure a sense of relevancy out there today:
Amazon again tried to preempt any moves by Apple by refreshing its' Kindle:
As reported by Business Insider yesterday, "....(there is a 7-inch model for $139 and a 6-inch model for only $99. Both options come in a fun variety of colors (blue, bright green, magenta, black, and white) and are a significant upgrade from last year's $139, 7-inch device. " It was amazing how things have changed as Amazon began this whole movement and rolled out the first Kindle (a simple reader) back in the day for over $ 500. This is as Amazon is trying to light a fire under the Fire Phone too.
As the fascination by the leading lights of tech's is ever so, one thought was ever so prevalent about the need to keep trying and keep exploring. What Einstein reminded us (courtesy of the team @ Simple Truths) was ever so prevalent and timely:
Thursday, September 18, 2014
| |
YOUR BEST SOURCE FOR THE UNBIASED MARKET COMMENTARY YOU WON'T GET FROM WALL STREET |
Apple Refresh Not so Refreshing
| |||
by Jon Markman
| |||
Dear Mike, Naturally the new device is selling like crazy, as Apple has forced customers enslaved to its iTunes ecosystem to endure more than two years without a new phone that meets the standards of the rest of the modern world. Despite the long wait, it's amazing how meek the iPhone refresh is. Not one single new feature in the hardware or software that could be considered innovative: no update to Siri, nothing from the Beats acquisition or audio overall; nothing in the camera or image processing; nothing new in software such as maps or video; no improvement in the email/text/phone stack; no multitasking. Just a bigger (not better) screen, a near-field communications chip, a new way to pay for stuff (tapping instead of swiping) via Apple Pay; and internal links to another in series of forgettable, expensive smartwatches that need to be recharged daily. Honestly, the fact that the biggest splash of the announcement day was to glorify a payment system tells you everything you need to know. That is about as out of touch with what consumers care about as the company's tone-deaf attempt to shove a new U2 album down iTunes users' throats.
Now don't get me wrong. Apple is going to have a great upgrade cycle for the iPhone 6 from customers who have waited two long years for bigger screens. But key for investors is that nothing Chief Exec Tim Cook announced is going to move the dial much on bringing in significant numbers of new users or revenue sources. Apple shares are still pretty cheap, so it's not like the king is going to topple. It's just disappointing that it has abdicated its former role as a technology leader. The new iPhone 6 all by itself is a pedestrian mobile phone. Nice looking, a big upgrade over the iPhone 5, but it has nothing that Android phone users have not seen or been enjoying for a few years. Indeed if it had been released with a different label the iPhone 6 would be considered just another middle-market, run-of-the-mill device made in China. For people who like to peer into the future, however, the new Apple Pay system though is quite interesting. It is too early to make snap judgments on whether it is important or not, but there was good commentary around the web on this subject that I want to share with you. The first major change in our parents' lifetimes was the development of the credit card. The first major change in my lifetime was the development of the debit card and ATMs, which I first used as a student at Duke University in the late 1970s, as North Carolina banks were pioneers. The next big change was the development of online banking and online bill pay. And after that came non-bank online or mobile transaction systems such as PayPal.The overall theme is that the way you pay for things is about to change again. Through all of these developments, we all still use paper checks, which is kind of amazing. My wife is fully modern in every way but still writes checks for health insurance, taxes and smaller items like our house cleaners. At my business I still issue checks to many vendors, even though I more commonly use bank auto-pay, debit cards, airline-linked credit cards, PayPal or Intuit Payment Network, depending on the size of the remittance and recipient. I wanted to pay the czar of my fantasy football league with my Venmo account or Google Wallet, but the guy — who is an IT professional at a major fast food company — insisted on a check, primarily because he did not want to p! rovide personal bank account information to one of these firms. My point is that there is already a wide variety of methods that we use to transact today, and Apple Pay will try to break in as a newcomer. It has a leg up, to be sure, as it already has 800 million credit cards on hand in iTunes, but it's going to be a hard sell. It announced Macy's as a partner, but Best Buy (BBY) and Wal-Mart (WMT) have said they will not offer Apple Pay at their stores. Still, Apple Pay represents the point of the spear, as financial institutions recognize that they face challenges from technology companies that are not eager to work with incumbents. Both of the biggest transaction networks, Visa (V) and Mastercard (MA), are on board. James Anderson, senior v.p. at MasterCard, told the New York Times: "There are schemes that don't respect and honor the payment networks. We want to invest in programs that respect our role in the ecosystem." Banks are going to bear the brunt of Apple pay by offering it a lower rate than they normally accept from credit card transactions, according to the NYT report. The story said banks, which take the biggest chunk of credit card transaction fees, are hopeful that they will make up for the lower rates by processing new types of transactions that are currently being done with cash or other payment methods. In contrast, the NYT reports that the big credit card networks will not have to pay any costs for working with Apple due to their clout. Still the emergence of Apple in this space could push down fraud costs, which could in turn push down credit card fees for everyone. The NYT observes that the partnership with Apple is much more attractive than an initiative being led by some of the biggest retailers, known as the Merchant Customer Exchange, that appears to be looking to replace the card networks altogether. Not coincidentally, the two Apple Pay holdouts — Best Buy and Wal-Mart — are major supporters of the Merchant Customer Exchange. Apple Pay is going to try to set itself apart through a perception of greater security. The NYT reports that the major payment networks and banks have all been working on a system that allows customers to make a payment without handing over any personal details, using a kind of digital token that can be used only once. Apple Pay will be the first program to use the tokenization system on a widespread basis, and banks and card companies hope it will pave a path that allows them to remain key players. The global head of strategic partnerships at Visa told the NYT: "We can show the world this is where it's all headed. This may be the inflection point where you can see a real improvement in what has been a clunky digital experience." Still this is not a lock. Retailers have to buy and install special hardware to read the wireless NFC signals. And while these are popular in Europe and Canada, they just have not caught on in the United States despite a strong attempt to pioneer digital wallets by Google Checkout. Another angle was explained in a New York Times op-ed piece by Edward Castronova, a professor of media at Indiana University, and Joshua A.T. Fairfield a professor of law at Washington and Lee University. They said that if widely adopted, Apple Pay could usher in a new era in which virtual assets of all sorts — traditional currencies, but also airline miles and retailer loyalty points — are interchangeable, opening up enormous purchasing power for consumers and creating tough challenges for governments around the world. They said that moving toward a digital wallet for dollars is only a marginal step forward. The real change is how the digital wallet technology facilitates the parallel emergence of virtual purchasing power. We don't think of things like loyalty points as currency, they argued, because virtual money has traditionally been locked down, in the sense that its use was strictly limited: If you earned points from Amazon, only you could use them, and you could exchange them for dollars only within the Amazon marketplace. The only currencies you could use everywhere in an economy were state-issued currencies, like the dollar. But that distinction is eroding, the professors observed: The value of a currency lies in what you can buy with it, not in the fact that a government says it's worth something. "That's why a digital wallet, loaded with your dollars, credit and loyalty points, is such a revolutionary technology: It makes those transfers and transactions seamless and safe." They add: "Frictionless exchange is a killer app. Some companies might lose value in their loyalty programs, but others will find enormous value in issuing their own currencies for advertising or data-tracking purposes, or even just because the creation of a successful virtual currency or digital wallet lets companies make money by making money. That's certainly Apple's bet." Imagine you want to buy a shirt at Target, the professors go on. Your digital wallet can pay for it with dollars, your Target points or any other form of purchasing power that Target accepts. Wave your phone at the cash register, and Apple Pay could theoretically determine the best mix of currencies and non-currencies for that moment. Apple did not announce this, and may not even be contemplating it, but fully digitized money and non-money currency in a smart virtual wallet would allow full fungibility of everything you consider valuable. That's scary, as well as cool, and probably not too far away. Best wishes, Jon Markman |
Amazon again tried to preempt any moves by Apple by refreshing its' Kindle:
As
As the fascination by the leading lights of tech's is ever so, one thought was ever so prevalent about the need to keep trying and keep exploring. What Einstein reminded us (courtesy of the team @ Simple Truths) was ever so prevalent and timely:
| |
No comments:
Post a Comment