Over time, Apple will strike wholesale deals with several mobile operators so that Apple can provide wireless service directly to its customers, as Apple Mobile, Bluestein predicts. As “crazy” as that might sound, it might be a fairly common tack taken by any number of device, service or application providers, eventually.
In fact, it fits well with the general thinking that, over time, mobile and fixed network service providers will increasingly want to sell services to third-party business partners as well as end users.
Other potential moves by a number of leading application or software providers show the ways business advantage is shifting in the mobility business.
Microsoft's recent investment in the new company that will own the Nook tablet and content business shows the growing importance content, advertising and commerce operations are assuming for device and application suppliers, for example.
Some believe the "Four Horsemen" of the Internet include Facebook, Apple, Google and Amazon. Others might say the list actually is "Five Horsemen" and include Microsoft. Either way, the notion is that handful of firms have the ability, at least in principle, to create and own a complete and walled-off ecosystem in which consumers use a single company’s hardware, operating system and storefront to search online, buy apps and purchase digital media and physical products.
What remains less clear is the importance of bundling "access" with those other device, content, commerce and advertising capabilities, though. In principle, the separation of applications from access is quite helpful for any app provider.
On the other hand, are there ways app providers can create a better end user experience by bundling apps, devices and connectivity?
That remains less clear. But one approach that might have clear advantages is the ability to create mobile access services that are optimized for media consumption. In other words, the aim might be to optimize the streaming media and gaming experience, not provide a "better" voice or messaging experience.
That could take the form of a branded content delivery service distinct from general-purpose Internet apps, voice or messaging services. What might be bundled, in other words, is a branded experience enhanced by CDN capabilities. In each ecosystem, content delivered as part of a content app or service might essentially be a "private network" experience taking advantage of available optimization techniques.
Think of a content virtual private network and you get the idea. That sort of optimized access might make more sense than any of the leading ecosystem providers becoming actual general-purpose mobile service providers.
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