Friday, May 27, 2011

Apple finally launches iPhone 4 in India after a year

 



Call it sheer competition from rivals or to the growing demand for the smartphones, Apple’s iPhone, the pioneer in touch screen smartphone has finally launched its much awaited predecessor iPhone 4 in India, after its initial launch in US a year ago.

With Indian mobile market already flooded with smartphone makers from Samsung, LG, HTC, Blackberry and Nokia, the entry of iPhone will surely intensify the already crowded market.

Telecom Analysts believe that India is touted as the second largest market for smartphones and with the implementation of new technologies like 3G, will further boost the sales of iPhone in India — the darling of millions worldwide.

As of now, Google’s Android seems to be the market leader with already 6 out of 10 smartphones being powered by Android Operating System, one has to wait and watch how Microsoft—Nokia combine, who promise to bring the best of hardware capabilities, courtesy Nokia, and Microsoft which is already making waves for its Windows 7 Mobile OS compete against giants like Apple and Google. However, the only way Microsoft can compete against Apple is to churn out millions of Addons, probably for free and mimic the Apple iStore concept to stay in the race.

Operator in India

Apple has tied up with India’s most trusted air carrier — Airtel to launch its iPhone 4 in India and is priced between Rs. 34,500 with a memory capacity of 16 GB and Rs. 40,990 with 32 GB capacity and boasts of new exciting features like Facetime for VideoChat, Retina Display and five mega pixel rear camera with LED flash capable of HD recording.

“The iPhone 4 boasts a higher-quality screen and longer battery life than the previous model” said Airtel CEO, PD Sharma who heads the West Bengal and Orissa Operations in India and added, “With the high number of mobile users, smartphone market will grow in the country.”

To check out the latest features, log on to: http://www.apple.com/in/iphone/

Keep watching this space as we bring more from the tech world.

Venky, Signing Off!

You can reach the author at: businessbanter@gmail.com

New Fluidic Verna: The hot 'chic' in India


As the new fluidic Verna mesmerizes the views with its teaser ad during the ongoing DLF IPL 4 this season, the company stated that the bookings for this new beauty has already clocked 5,000 Pan India. The company is working round the clock to meet the whopping demand  of the customers in India.

Check out the various features of the car, the first in its segment, is sure to turn on the heat on its competitors like Ford Motors, Maruti Suzuki and Tata Motors.

Photos:













Features:

    * Front map lamps with Sun glass holder
    * 4 Speakers
    * Illuminated P/Window switches with Drv side Auto Down
    * Electrically adjustable outside rear view mirrors
    * Keyless entry - integrated on folding key
    * Air conditioner
    * Driver information display
    * Electric power steering with tilt function
    * Front seats back pockets
    * Driver & Passenger vanity mirror
    * MT shift indicator
    * Alternator management system

Exteriors:

    * Full Wheel Cover
    * Body colored outside mirrors with LED turn lndicators
    * Chrome front grille
    * Door black out tapes
    * Chrome tipped dual mutfler

Luxury Interiors:

    * Rear Center Armrest w/ Cup Holder
    * Full Cloth Upholstery
    * Blue interior illumination
    * 2 DIN MP3 player with AUX-in & USB
    * Audio hand remote

Safety Features:

    * Central locking system
    * Front Fog Lamps
    * Clutch lock system
    * Immobiliser

Check out the various variants available in India

Hyundai Verna Fluidic 1.4 VTVT
CC: 1396cc Petrol
Transmission: Manual            
Ex-Showroom Price: Rs. 7,04,943

Hyundai Verna Fluidic 1.6 VTVT
CC: 1591cc Petrol
Transmission: Manual
Ex-Showroom Price: Rs. 7,70,992

Hyundai Verna Fluidic 1.4 CRDI
CC: 1396cc Diesel
Transmission: Manual
Ex-Showroom Price: Rs. 8,15,891

Hyundai Verna Fluidic 1.6 VTVT SX
CC: 1591cc Petrol
Transmission: Manual
Ex-Showroom Price: Rs. 8,31,502

Hyundai Verna Fluidic 1.6 CRDI
CC: 1582cc Diesel
Transmission: Manual
Ex-Showroom Price: Rs. 8,81,942

Hyundai Verna Fluidic 1.6 VTVT SX Opt
CC: 1591cc Petrol
Transmission: Manual
Ex-Showroom Price: Rs. 9,02,096

Hyundai Verna Fluidic 1.6 CRDI SX
CC: 1582cc Diesel
Transmission: Manual
Ex-Showroom Price: Rs. 9,42,451

Hyundai Verna Fluidic 1.6 VTVT SX Opt AT
CC: 1591cc Petrol
Transmission: Automatic
Ex-Showroom Price: Rs. 9,72,691

Hyundai Verna Fluidic 1.6 CRDI SX Opt
CC: 1582cc Diesel
Transmission: Manual
Ex-Showroom Price: Rs. 10,13,411

Hyundai Verna Fluidic 1.6 CRDI SX Opt AT
CC: 1582cc Diesel
Transmission: Automatic
Ex-Showroom Price: Rs. 10,84,025

Watch out this space as we bring you the latest from the auto world.

Venky, Signing Off!

Google forays into Mobile Payments through Wallet



“In the past few thousand years, the way we pay has changed just three times—from coins, to paper money, to plastic cards. Now we’re on the brink of the next big shift,” exhorts Google, the undisputable king of Online search.


In what could certainly be a bad news for rivals, and which could further mark its growing dominance of the fast-growing mobile arena, more importantly, m-Commerce, Google yesterday unwrapped its soon-to-be launched mobile payment application, Google Wallet. The application, the search giant promises, will transform your tiny phone into your wallet. “You’ll be able to tap, pay and save using your phone and near field communication (NFC),” a communiqué from the Mountain View, California-based behemoth said. Google Wallet is currently under field test now and the company is planning for its commercial launch soon.
Google Wallet is a key part of the Online search major’s ongoing efforts to extend its Web dominance to the fast-growing yet still-to-explode field of mobile commerce or m-Commerce. According to the company, while its new application is aimed at further enhancing the convenience factor for the customers and save them from the hassles of carrying a number of cards from credit/debit cards, gift cards, coupons, loyalty cards etc, it also aims to give merchants more ways to offer coupons and loyalty programs to customers, as well as bridging the gap between online and offline commerce.

“When you tap to pay, your phone will also automatically redeem offers and earn loyalty points for you,” it says. And the 800-pound Search gorilla hopes that ‘Someday, ‘even things like boarding passes, tickets, ID and keys could be stored in Google Wallet.’

However, the new service is only limited to United States of America and will roll out in United States and other European Countries in the near future. For users residing in the US can enter their zip code, in the image below, to check the availability of the Google Wallet in your area:


While the world awaits the formal launch of Google Wallet, you may also expect some more exciting moves by the giant as it straddles across the Web and Mobile spaces swiftly to protect and extend its dominance. Rivals better watch out!




Keep watching this space, as we bring you the latest from the technology world. 

With inputs from Venky, its Amy, Signing Off!
 
(Image courtesy: Google)

Thursday, May 19, 2011

Dettol - Where are you?




The recent spat involving FMCG giant, Reckitt Benckiser, and Modern Retail's heavyweights like Big Bazaar has caused consumers much inconvenience.

If you’ve searched for your favorite Dettol liquid handwash soap recently and ended up not getting the one at a Big Bazaar outlet near you, blame it on Reckitt Benckiser, the Anglo-Dutch FMCG giant, owner of such popular brands as Dettol, Harpic and Airwick among others, whose stubbornness has made sure that modern retailers like Big Bazaar, Reliance Fresh and More stores from AV Birla Retail have either run out of the stocks or are not placing fresh orders for any of its products. Last month, headlines in pink dailies screamed that Kishore Biyani-owned Big Bazaar stores have threatened to boycott products from Reckitt Benckiser as the latter allegedly trimmed retailer’s margins without taking them into confidence. Terming the move an arbitrary one on part of the manufacture, even other outlets had said to follow the suit. And the slugfest between the two parties has resulted into frustration for the consumers who use the brand.

Cashing on the face-off probably, or it might just be a coincidence, Hindustan Unilver has been aggressively promoting its brands like Lifebuoy liquid handwash and Domex at these modern retail outlets some of whom are also aggressively pushing their private labels in these categories as alternatives to RB’s products. For instance, Future Group is promoting its in-store labels like Clean Mate, while More stores are offering Germex as an inexpensive alternative to Dettol. Ditto with Reliance Fresh, which too is stepping up the effort to improve visibility of its personal healthcare private label brand Endurf, thereby confirming the growing significance of India’s modern ratailers, and more importantly, the rising penetration and popularity of private labels.

Though private labels at present contribute less than 10% of overall sales of modern retailers, in general, they are nonetheless expected to pose serious challenge to manufacturers’ brands in the foreseeable future. In developed markets of the US and Europe, modern retail accounts for over two-thirds of overall sales of consumer products while in Asian markets like China their share is about a third. Given the fast-paced growth of modern retail in India it won’t be surprising that the country would soon be able to catch up with at least its neighbors in Asia, which means manufacturers might not be able to continue enjoying their present clout over modern retailers for long. In fact, even in the present scenario, they (manufacturers) risk letting consumers shift loyalty in favor private labels of retailers (which are also planning to make their private labels available at local kirana shops as well), which could do much damage to their brands and have far-reaching impact.

However, at the same time, modern retailers also face the risk of annoying consumers who might not settle for anything other than a manufacturer brand. So, it’s not that by boycotting national brands retailers could have the last laugh as far as gaining consumer loyalty is concerned. Also, though in the past too, there had been instances of spat between retailers and manufacturers (Big Bazaar’s face-off with Kellogg’s and Frito Lay), this time it is different with the emergence of other alternatives like herbal and ayurvedic products in segments like cosmetics, personal care such as soaps, creams and shampoos which are available at only exclusive shops also pose, if not that big, challenge to both the manufacturers’ as well as retailers’ brands.

Given that, finding a middle ground, that too quickly, is just what experts would prescribe and is the need of the hour. After all, ‘consumer is king.’ 

Amy, Chief Editor.

You can reach the author at chiefeditor@addonviews.com

Tags: Dettol, Health care, Soaps, Skin care, FMCG, Kellogs, Frito Lay,  Hindustan Unilver, Lifebuoy, Domex, Reckitt Benckiser, Big Bazaar.

Wednesday, May 18, 2011

Growth Fatigue!: Symbian, on a slide




Even though Symbian maintains its lead over rivals in the worldwide mobile o/s market sweepstake, the gap is narrowing, as latest data from StatCounter suggests.

While Symbian, from Nokia’s stable, might still be the top mobile operating system (O/S) worldwide but its market leadership is surely on wane as the latest data from data analysis agency, StatCounter shows. Symbian’s global market share stood at 30.25%, as on January 31, 2011, down from 34.16% a year ago. It is followed by Apple’s iOS at the number 2 spot with a market share of 25%, down from 33.13% in January 2010. And guess who won at the cost of these two players. While, it may not take much for you to suggest that it’s Google’s Android, there is another surprise winner in Blackberry, of course the gain was comparatively much substantial in case of the former (i.e., Android). Android grew its market share from a meager 4.54% in January 2010 to nearly 15% (14.61% to be precise) while Blackberry’s O/S added 475 basis points to take its tally to 15.03% in January 2011 from 10.28%, a year ago.

Symbian vs. others – The gap is narrowing
(January 2011)



Source: gs.statcounter.com 

In India too, Symbian rules the roost with a market share of 71.48%, as on January 31, 2011, according to StatCounter. Samsung is a distant second with a market share of 10.6%. Android with a market share of just 1.25% is placed fourth.


India’s mobile o/s market share: Advantage Symbian
(January 2011)



Source: gs.statcounter.com 

However, as the StatCounter data shows, Symbian has been losing market share consistently every month since the last one year. But what has surprised market pundits is Nokia’s, which is now led by an ex-Microsoft hand, latest decision to enter into a tie-up with Microsoft and adopt the latter’s Windows 7 o/s.

Does the new development suggest Nokia planning to dump Symbian?


Amy, Chief Editor

Rise of Tablet: Does it mean end of Desktop?



Does the growing popularity of tablet computer mean end of the ubiquitous desktop PC? At least that is what major global research firms foresee ‘happening soon.’

“Demand for tablets is continuing to hit sales of full-fat PCs.”
-  Gartner

As the euphoria over Apple’s iPad India launch begins to build up, a big question mark pops up over the fate of the desktops or personal computers (or simply PCs). And it is coming from no ordinary quarter but the most respected IT market intelligence firm, Gartner, which predicts tablet devices like iPad and Samsung’s Galaxy Tab to grow by 181% to 54.8 million in 2011, and then to jump more than tenfold to 208 million in 2014. According to Wikipedia, a tablet computer, or simply tablet, is a complete personal mobile computer, larger than a mobile phone or personal digital assistant integrated into a flat touch screen and primarily using stylus, digital pen or fingertip input along with an onscreen virtual keyboard rather than a physical keyboard.

So, is the end of desktops coming soon? At least a deluge of recent shipment figures suggest so. For instance, the PC sales in the US, according to Gartner, fell by 6.6% (for all the manufacturers) during the fourth quarter of the calendar year 2010. IDC too said that the US PC shipments fell by 4.8% in Q4 2010.  Regarding the worldwide PC sales, during the same quarter, Gartner said that it was ‘weak’ with growth of just 3.1% as against 4.8% it had originally forecast. The research firm attributed this to the rising competition from other consumer electronic devices such as tablets and games consoles. “The PC market will face challenges with more intensified competition among consumer spending,” said Gartner’s Principal Analyst, Mikako Kitagawa, in a statement. The research firm pegged the growth in global shipments of PCs at 13.8% to 351 million units in 2010.

According to IDC, worldwide PC shipments jumped nearly 14 percent in 2010 over last year, despite a relatively meager performance in the fourth quarter, a soft consumer market and vigorous sales of media tablets. “In addition to relatively high market penetration and a 'good-enough' computing experience with existing PCs, consumers are being more cautious with their purchases and competing devices have been vying for consumer dollars,” said David Daoud, IDC’s Research Director. “This situation is likely to persist in 2011, if not worsen, as a wave of Media Tablets could put a dent in the traditional PC market," he warned.

However, Canalys, another IT research firm, begs to differ from its peers on the issue of whether tablet devices should be defined differently from PCs or not. In a release dated January 26, 2011, the Palo Alto-based firm said that worldwide total PC shipments grew at a healthy 19% in Q4 2010. Canalys, unlike its peers, incorporates pad shipments, such as the Samsung Galaxy Tab and Apple’s iPad, in its total PC market report. “Any argument that a pad is not a PC is simply out of sync,” said Daryl Chiam, Senior Analyst at Canalys. “With screen sizes of seven inches or above, ample processing power, and a growing number of applications, pads offer a computing experience comparable to netbooks. They compete for the same customers and will happily coexist. As with smart phones, some users will require a physical keyboard, while others will do without,” he added further. 

Pads to cannibalize other consumer electronic devices too

While not everyone would agree with that view, one point which everyone agrees on is that pads are the future. In the recently concluded quarter, Apple climbed to third place in the market, ‘thanks to impressive iPad and Mac sales, as well as fast growth in Asia Pacific,’ said Canalys. The firm attributes the majority of Q4 market growth to the rising demand for media tablets, a new product category. “Pads gave consumers increased product choice over the holiday season,” said Canalys Analyst Tim Coulling. “While they do not appeal to first-time buyers or low-income households, they are proving extremely popular as additional computing devices,” he said further. Since its commercial launch in April 2010, Apple is estimated to have shipped about 10 million iPads; the company sold 4.19 million units of its hugely popular pad during the Q4 2010, compared to 3.27 million units it shipped in the preceding quarter. And this has driven competitors crazy with every gizmo maker worth its salt scrambling to hit the market with its version of a pad (read: tablet). From Acer to Dell, Samsung to HP, they all have been slogging hard to give a tough fight to iPad.

Industry analysts also warn that pads would also be a major threat to other standalone consumer electronic devices such as e-readers and gaming consoles. “The all-in-one nature of media tablets will result in the cannibalization of other consumer electronics devices such as e-readers, gaming devices and media players,” said Carolina Milanesi, Research Vice President of Gartner’s Mobile Devices team, in a statement. “Mini notebooks will suffer from the strongest cannibalization threat as media tablet average selling prices drop below $300 over the next two years,” she added.

iSupply, another leading research firm, however, is comparatively more vocal in its support for pads. “We believe creation tablets will create both a larger market opportunity and more PC cannibalization than others forecast today,” writes William Kidd, iSupply’s Director & Principal Analyst, in a report titled, “Tablets: Epicenter for the Convergence of Smart Phones and PCs.” He further added, “Our departure from conventional thinking stems from our belief that tablets (2-4 years out) not only will be able to retain their form factor advantages, but also possess notebook content creation capabilities when equipped with a competent O/S and a wireless keyboard/mouse.”


Desktops to stay, despite pads’ onslaught

Most analysts believe that desktops would survive despite the rising onslaught from tablet computers. At least for now. “Tablets will be relevant as a second device, not as the first PC,” said S Rajendran, Chief Marketing Officer of Acer, India, where it is the market leader in the light-notebook segment, in an interview to DNA newspaper. Further, another drawback is, the world's most popular operating system -Windows- is yet to be adapted to run on tablets, the news daily quoted him saying.

But others like Dell’s Amit Midha, Chairman for South Asia and Greater China, believe that the market for media tablets would only soar from here on, and they are busy devising strategies to ensure that happens, sooner, by emphasizing on the ‘acceptability’ factor. “We are looking at various media service providers to launch an India-specific tablet solution,” the news paper quoted Midha as saying. Towards this, Dell which makes Streak brand of tablet computer is trying to tie-up with content providers like newspaper and content publishers, music and multi-media copyright owners etc. 

India’s tablet PC market is estimated at 25,000 units a quarter, but holds the promise of growing quickly as 3G penetration gathers momentum, the business daily said.

India and China are the two fastest growing markets in the world where demands for such potable devices are only going to grow further and hence how the consumers (especially the youth which is a major buyer segment) respond to these offerings would be crucial. 

This is Amy, Signing Off!
Feel free to contact Amy at: businessbanter@gmail.com


Source: iSupply, IDC, Engadget.com