
"But perhaps more important subsequently has been Apple's ability to build and motivate a large and active developer community that produces content, in the form of apps. This ecosystem of developers and the value they bring to the platform, as well as to consumers, is the hardest aspect of the iPhone proposition for other companies to replicate, especially given the reluctance of developers to support multiple software platforms. It is also the reason Apple is so keen to protect this community from disintermediation by the open web and hence its rather tough stance with Adobe over Flash.
"However, the iPhone 4 faces much stiffer competition than its predecessors. The rise of Google Android over the last two years has been phenomenal and is allowing manufacturers to create appealing alternatives to the iPhone; critically at cheaper prices. These handsets are more than just iPhone clones. The risk to Apple is that these devices offer greater freedom with available content and may prove more appealing, if it offers the right user and developer experience, than a device with Apple approved content only. This may ultimately be what puts the brakes on unlimited iPhone growth."
Nathan Burley, Analyst at Ovum in Australia added, "From an Australian perspective, one interesting new feature of the iPhone 4 is that it supports quad-band 3G rather than tri-band in the previous versions. This means the iPhone 4 will be able to access the larger 900MHz 3G network footprints of Optus and Vodafone, where previous generations weren't. The gap to Telstra in terms of network user experience when using the iPhone 4 compared to previous versions will be narrowed."
SOURCE: OVUM