Quote:
Originally Posted by Brian
...do they fall under the jack of all trades, master of none category and put technology before customer needs?
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Nice post Brian. Gets you thinking the way a good post will do. But I think I don't care for the general perspective on convergence. I think a more basic point keeps getting missed.
I would like to propose a new way of looking at convergence that I've never seen anywhere else. But I think it's an important perspective that will catch on in time.
Consider a device that does more than one thing. The designer has got to choose the following:
PRIMARY PURPOSE
Is it primarily a phone? A game device? A handheld computer? An audio/video player? This is the function that must be easy and seamless. It's what the customer considers most important and primary justification and driver of the purchase. It will also be the feature that determines the form factor and some of the most important hardware/software choices.
For example, an iPod mp3 player may learn to do much more than play music, but it needs to always remember it's primary purpose or no one will want one.
And we are coming to a crossroads in smartphone design. Clearly there is a role for handheld computers that can function as a phone, and also for phones that function as handheld computers. The devices that have a primary function as a phone better have a smaller form factor, probably a smaller screen, and likely no bulky keypad. And it better work great as a phone, even in comparison to standalone phones. The OS version and memory capacity and so forth may be less important on a device that's primarily a phone, but it's critical on a device that's primarily a handheld computer. Conversely, a handheld computer might be a little bulkier but have a great screen. It might be just slightly less easy to dial a phone number, but it still has to be able to get the job done. It just doesn't have to compete as much with standalone phone devices because the customer is just happy to have a great handheld computer and a decent phone.
SECONDARY PURPOSE
The devices secondary purpose makes it a converged device, and also adds significant benefit. Typically, converged devices are likely to have a phone because almost everyone wants to have a cell phone available. But it doesn't have to have a phone. It could follow in the path of the Zodiac. But why did Zodiac fail? A lot of reasons, but one big reason is that it wasn't competitive as a gaming machine in comparison to other standalong portable gaming devices. If nothing else, it didn't have the same mass of titles. Gamers were, in general, not likely to pick a Zodiac. But that was its primary function, so even if it was a great pda it needed to find the gamers as customers and it couldn't do that. The form factor determined its primary function as gaming. A great secondary function (pda) was not enough to save it.
I have yet to see a pda with a great audio/video secondary function. The technology/software just isn't there. Simplicity of use, storage, etc. It's close, but not ready for the average consumer. But I think it could be about now. There should be a great pda out there that's also got a perfect audio/video suite and a simple process for adding content. I think that might have a chance to sell if it was done right and marketed that way. Or maybe not, but at least it would have a targeted market, and people could understand what it is for, and why to buy it. Right now I don't think people realize what pdas can do. Smartphones are only sold because they are phones + something. Usually email or web browsing. Aha, an example of a clear primary/secondary function that meets customer needs. It works and it can sell because it's a clear set of purposes and it's what people want.
OTHER PURPOSES
But even if people are mostly sold on primary/secondary functions, there's still room for additional things. A PalmOS or PPC device should never be sold as a laundry list of functions. But if you sell the primary and secondary funtions firsrt, then when you list all the "other" things it can do, all of a sudden it's a great bonus instead of just confusing the issue of who wants the device in the first place.
CONCLUSION
I'm sure that great minds can put all this into a framework much more polished and useful than what I can describe. But I think it's an important concept to break functionality and purpose of a converged device into primary, secondary and other purposes. That's going to define the device and the market, and people are going to be able to understand why they want it.