Showing posts with label Japan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Japan. Show all posts

Monday, February 1, 2010

Mophie Helps Japanese iPhones Get Their Shop On

Michigan based iPhone and iPod accessory maker Mophie is on the verge of solving one of the biggest complaints in the Japanese market about the iPhone, according to a story on Electonista. Over 60mil Japanese handsets support Sony's RFID-based, stored-value, mobile payment standard known as FeliCa, which allows consumers from Sapporo to Nagasaki to buy train tickets and iced-coffees with the waive of a handset over a ubiquitous smart terminal. The iPhone, which after some early disappointment is now the top-selling smartphone in the market, doesn't support this feature and it doesn't look like Apple has any plans to put the Sony chip under its hood anytime soon. But never fear, it looks like Mophie has solved the problem by embedding the chip in an "intelligent case" that works in conjunction with a downloadable App... cool workaround! According to the story the product will be in the market by Spring.

I have two takeaways from this story. 1) I continue to be jealous/frustrated that the US is lagging so far behind Japan (amongst others) in the practical implementation of mobile payments specifically and RFID/NFC based payment systems in general. Though I'll hand it to MasterCard for giving it a go with PayPass; and 2) it woke me up to some bitchin' things Mophie's doing with intelligent cases, including a FLO TV enabling product called the Juice Pack and a credit card reader called Marketplace.

Monday, July 20, 2009

Is Japan The Mobile Handset Galápagos?

A great story in the Sunday New York Times discusses the inability of Japanese handset manufacturers to parlay their ostensibly ultra-cool & uber-advanced domestic devices into worldwide consumer phenomena. Despite having developed capabilities like email in 1999, cameras in 2000, 3G in 2001, full-track downloads in 2002, mCommerce in 2004, broadcast TV in 2005, as well as super useful shit like universal barcode readers & video conferencing, companies like NEC, Panasonic, Fujitsu & Sharp get absolutely no love outside the land of the rising sun. The article attributes the problem, primarily, to inelegant, proprietary & "clunky" software...which makes developing apps for the devices cumbersome for publishers...and a Japanese proclivity for oversized clamshell style devices. While I think the software & style points are valid, I think the bigger issue is the difference in the evolution of how Japanese & most non-Japanese consumers perceive/use their mobile devices.

In Japan the mobile device, for most consumers, was the first & primary access point to the internet (and email) and NTT DoCoMo's iMode was the equivalent of AOL, Mosaic & Outlook...which was accessed from an NEC handset over the carrier's network, rather than from a Dell Inspiron 7000 with a 28.8 modem. Therefore Japanese handsets were basically 12-key netbooks from their inception. The capabilities that were mission critical for those devices - email, browsing, chatting & commerce - weren't important in (for example) the US, because early adopter types and soccer moms already had laptops to handle those functions. For Americans, until very recently, their mobile was for calls, texts (never big in Japan) and narcissistically repping badass-ness with a kickin' polyphonic tone. A device that could manage those tasks with the added benefit of looking slick in your hand, on your ear on next to your cutlery at Houstons (e.g RAZR) was an American rockstar. But now that the iPhone has enlightened the average Western consumer to the virtues of the mobile internet and the utility of downloadable apps, perhaps the ways in which we use and perceive our mobile phones are homogenizing with those of the Japanese...and, perhaps, their technologically sophisticated handset industry is going to surprise us with some uniquely evolved superstars in the smartphone game.

Thursday, May 21, 2009

Biggest In Japan...Panasonic P906i


According to a story from Wireless Watch Japan a new study by research firm GfK, based on POS data, has determined that the Panasonic P906i offered by operator NTT DoCoMo was the top selling handset in Japan during 2008. The report goes on to list the overall market Top 10 devices and Top 10 by operator. As usual, most of these phones have never seen the light of day outside of Japan. Circa 2005 Sprint in the US and Vodafone UK did attempt to offer some Japanese handsets...but they never seemed to get popular traction with consumers. I once heard that some US/Euro operators didn't like Japanese handsets because the manufacturers wouldn't indemnify them against health claims (yikes!)...could be nonsense. On the flip-side western handsets have never done very well in Japan. Global leader Nokia has tried and failed twice to penetrate the market...surrendering last time at the end of 2008. The only non-Japanese handset on this list is the 3G iPhone, which is the #3 handset on the #3 operator (it did not make the overall Top 10).

Here are some key specs for the P906i:
  • 2-way shellcase, opens vertically & horizontally
  • 3.1" widescreen VGA display (854x480)
  • One-Segment Mobile TV Tuner
  • 5.1 megapixel camera
  • Bluetooth 2.0
  • 200 hrs continuous talk
  • 58o hrs of standby
  • Micro SD/SDHC
  • 123 gms

Wednesday, January 21, 2009

Vertu Dumbphone Store Opens in Tokyo


According to Wireless Watch Japan Nokia (NOK) has opened the previously announced Japanese flagship store for it's ultra-blingy UK-based Vertu brand in the tony Ginza neighborhood of Tokyo. The high design devices which feature materials like titanium, gold and leather, design partnerships with Ferrari & Boucheron and functionality similar to Nokia's N-series range in price from $5k to over $300k for gem-encrusted special editions. These devices are a hot ticket with the million dollar license plate set in Dubai, the stripper girlfriends of Russian oligarchs, ballers and other nouveau riche folk with more dollars than sense. Good timing on the opening since the Japanese may soon be the only ones left who can afford such wretched excess.

Tuesday, January 20, 2009

Big In Japan


A reader poll conducted by Japanese gadget blog K-tai Watch revealed that the Best Handset of 2008 was the Sharp Aquos Fulltouch 931SH available from SoftBank Mobile. The HSDPA handset has a 3.8inch 1024 x 480 pixel touchscreen, TV tuner, bluetooth, RFID, GPS, 100mb of memory & a 5.2 megapixel camera with image stabilization. It's available in 4 colors, including hot pink.