Tuesday, November 4, 2008

iPhone Criticism by Mobile Phones Inventor

The news was published recently in telegraph.co.uk that mobile phones inverter has criticized Apple iPhone. The article title was “'Father' of mobile phones criticises iPhone” in that online magazine. The man is Martin Cooper who develop 1st mobile phone at Motorola in April 3, 1973. Recently, Martin Cooper had iPhone to use but he gave the phone to grandson because it was complicate to use.

Martin Cooper told, “A phone that's an internet appliance, an MP3 player, a camera and a whole bunch of other stuff doesn't make a lot of sense. You try to build a universal device that does all things for all people, and guess what? It doesn't do anything very well. We were promised affordable, ubiquitous broaband wireless for everyone. That promise is still just a promise. Where the cell sites ought to be is where the people are.”

The news further says with itself (telegraph), “However, Mr Cooper was full of praise for Google's Android open-source operating system for mobile phones, citing it as an example of the sort of open platform that would allow wireless devices to reach their full potential.

The first phone to run Android, the T-Mobile G1, goes on sale in the UK today. It makes its debut in a crowded marketplace dominated at one end by the likes of Nokia and Sony Ericsson, and by BlackBerry and Apple at the other. Apple recently announced that it had sold more than 13 million iPhones since the device went on sale in July last year.”

I don't know what they want to say. Is he in the favour of G1 or it is the negligence of iPhone? Google mobile is one of the best touch screen mobile phones but the statement of Martin Cooper shows the negligence with iPhone.

0 comments: