« Australia, Telstra and Double Layer UMTS | Main | AT&T In the Wilderness »

TrackBack

TrackBack URL for this entry:
http://www.typepad.com/services/trackback/6a00d83451c34f69e2014e8b917ee9970d

Listed below are links to weblogs that reference Verizon Open Access vs. Real Openness:

Comments

Stefan

I guess the closed-mindedness comes from CDMA history, which does not have a removable (SIM) card to enable easy change of phone/network. Of course, in theory they also have RUIM, but how many US operators use them? Any insights from US users? So, the phone is firmly locked to the "owner" of the UIM. Funny thing, this user-unfriendly idea is frequently picked off by phone vendors again, with a twist: in fact, *they* want to keep ownership of the phone and force all customers through themselves as a gateway to network operators. That's why they promote embedded/soft SIMs. Firmly locked in to the "my precious" phone vendor? No thanks. I prefer removable cards.

dominic hayes

Makes me think it parallels what Apple does with iApps. Quite controlling, but it doesn't seem to have harmed their business model and consumers seem happy. There is a view that this ensures everything works properly before consumers see the end product. Another view is that it effectively 'censors' innovation.
Orange in the UK use to do something similar with their handsets, only releasing new models when they were fully tested. It was annoying for subscribers wanting the latest and greatest phone as Orange were always the last with new phones (but nothing stopped them buying unlocked ones to use); perhaps it put some customers off? It did mean that Orange services generally worked as intended. I don't know if they still do it.
I like that fact that I can move devices between networks - one of the strengths of 3GSM.

The comments to this entry are closed.

My Photo

The Books to this Blog

My Pictures on Flickr

  • www.flickr.com
    martin.sauter's photos More of martin.sauter's photos

Android Cell Logger App

Misc

  • Clicky
    Clicky Web Analytics

Copyright

  • (c) 2005-2012 Martin Sauter - All rights reserved