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Apple's ban of GV = WIN for Android

Apple's ban of GV = WIN for Android
Posted Tuesday, July 28, 2009 by John Walton     
Views: 14498
Likely attributable to Apple's snuggly relationship with AT&T, iPhone just suffered a serious blow in the form of non-competitive practices. For those who missed the news yesterday, Apple removed Sean Kovacs' Google Voice application, GV Mobile, from the App Store, vaguely citing duplicate features as the reason.

Google Voice allows users to establish a phone number other than that associated with their mobile account and make calls, send texts, etc., via that number. It also provides rich contact grouping and call routing functions, as well as email transcriptions of voice mail. Applications have been developed for various platforms that effectively inject access to a user's Google Voice account into the applications the phone natively uses for dialing, sending messages, and reaching voice mail. It's like having an alternate carrier at your fingertips.

VoiceCentral, an iPhone app similar to GV Mobile, was also banned, indicating a call has been sent down from the upper echelon to target such code. So effectively, Apple is saying we can't use third-party Google Voice apps on their phones. So what? Who cares? Why is AT&T suspected of unfair play? Because Google Voice offers cheaper SMS and international calling. And Apple's exclusivity agreement probably doesn't contain a provisio allowing other carriers to jump in through the back door.

Google has an official Google Voice program for iPhone on the way, but there has been no clarification of whether the pulling of VoiceCentral and Google Voice was a preemptive strike to make way for a sanctioned program, or if Apple is taking a stand against Google Voice altogether. Considering the recent tossing of a native iPhone app for Google's Latitude in favor of a web version, it doesn't seem the two are holding hands.

So there's a brief summary of what's going on. My contribution here is that I'm going to play down the possibility that Apple's tactics are a crushing tragedy for the future of Google Voice, and highlight the opportunity this turn of events presents for Android. (Did you expect anything less?)

Google Voice is huge. Android is huge. I think both represent significant changes (and advancement, in my case) in the way we use and perceive our mobile phones. iPhone may be the only game in town in the eyes of the average smartphone consumer right now, but the display of fireworks I hope and expect to see from Android and Google Voice in the coming year could change that. And the big G, who should not be underestimated, is just the giant to parade the benefits of open software through the suburban malls of America. It doesn't matter if consumers know what open means.

iPhone is the embodiment of a closed product line, and Google is quickly becoming the high-profile champion of FLOSS. While I don't think Android is currently capable of making a dent in the existing iPhone user base, I can see an attention grabbing phone like Hero (and soon, hopefully, a super beefed-up HTC Sense successor) causing an iPhone-bound shopper to think twice.

Everyone and their grandmother has an iPhone, and what kid wants the same phone as their dad? Adults, on the other hand, will be seduced by the benefits of Google Voice, I think. I won't complain any more about the lack of Hero in T-Mo USA's line up, even though I totally want one and am sticking with magenta. I really want to see that thing sitting next to the iPhone in AT&T stores. That's the best place in the world for it, really. Consideration for App Store maturity, iTunes integration, and a killer fit for folks who like other Apple products, could fall by the wayside in the face of a sexy new interface and hip, bold design.

I suppose at this point I should acknowledge the observations of seasoned bloggers who have tested the Hero, and admit that lag is the Achillies' heel of the device. iPhone's non-multitasking swiftness would probably be the most apparent score for Apple if the two were being compared side-by-side. Still, I hope a grand and noble battle is about to begin. If not Hero, then the next one. Arm it to the teeth, HTC. And give it a name worthy of a merciless warrior. Ares? Mars, perhaps? No, screw the lower gods. Go for Zeus!

All about: Android, Google, Apple, AT&T
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John Walton
John Walton - Cell phone editor
John Walton is a student and writer who spends most of his free time fingerpicking an acoustic guitar and authoring biographical snippets in the third-person. He lives with his wife and their cat,...

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Comments on this Article

Profile image icon for lungjian
lungjian @ Jul 30 10:09 AM
It would be much tougher for AT&T to strong arm Google into keeping their own app (for their own phone OS) off the app store, but in the end it wouldn't matter greatly. Unlike the iPhone, every other smartphone has the ability to install downloaded apps outside the carrier's chain of control. GV for Android will be available all over the intrawebz. Sure, many users don't want to get all tweaky and will just stick with the "official" process, but this sort of omission is the type that will drive even non-tech moms & dads to either figure it out or get Junior to load it for them. In the long run, it would have a ripple effect on AT&T's App Store - one that can't be measured and will therefore be ignored by the powers that be, who will not want to bear the blame for one seemingly logical, yet incredibly short-sighted decision.
Profile image icon for ellis037
ellis037 @ Jul 29 11:19 AM
Google is intrusive, so I am grateful to AT&T to trying to keep Google and its apps out -- as far as possible.

On another matter . . . you really hit the nail on the head, John, when you wrote: "Everyone and their grandmother has an iPhone, and what kid wants the same phone as their dad?" I wanted an Apple iPhone 3GS, but after my wife bought hers, I foud myself drooling over the HTC Touch Pro2, even though I love the iPhone!
Profile image icon for jbarth09
jbarth09 @ Jul 29 7:05 AM
If Samsung or HTC launch an Android based device, with a Nvidia Tegra powered chipset, it will melt faces.
Profile image icon for John Walton
John Walton @ Jul 29 7:00 PM
I am so ready to be melted
Profile image icon for ChazClout
ChazClout @ Jul 29 3:03 AM
With 2 recent outages with o2's network (Apples preferred network in the UK) and Apples decision to block apps like GV I've decided to drop the iPhone and replace it with the Hero.

The iPhone platform has really changed the way that smartphones are integrated with a great app store which is sadly ruined by some dubious decisions and control by Apple and the phone networks.
Profile image icon for triggerhippy
triggerhippy @ Jul 28 10:57 PM
Forgot to mention that while I hope the Android app market flourishes to iPhone levels, I hope it doesn't mimic Apple's questionable censorship of apps. I don't like to have my choices removed from me because someone might find an app offensive. Don't buy it then.
Profile image icon for triggerhippy
triggerhippy @ Jul 28 10:52 PM
The Hero couldn't take the fight to the iPhone.

Not crisp enough. (Lag)

Not enough apps.

HTC can't really do anything about the relatively anemic app market which still plagues the Android platform, but I am very interested in a more powerful version of the Hero. Hopefully HTC is working on that right now.

Profile image icon for Predator
Predator @ Jul 28 11:47 PM
i'm sorry the android does'nt have thousands of useless apps like apple. let's talk about the fact that it can't multitask which is a big deal to alot of people. it might give a bit of lag because of it. but it's not earth shattering to the point of disgust.
3 years now and apple still has that same boring design, not to mention it's the ultimate bandwagon. when you start seeing 13 year old kids beg mom and dad to buy them a phone because they want to follow the crowd at school is not only stupid but scary.
Profile image icon for mikeaguilar95m
mikeaguilar95m @ Jul 29 8:05 PM
yea seriously trigger your living through the hype iPhone is WAY too overrated and over hyped. Im not hating on the iPhone but im telling you, I bet you can not find anything bad about the Hero besides the minor lag. The thing about there not being "enough" apps. REALLY who really needs over a hundreds of thousands of apps. iPhone is very limited and standard unlike the Hero so you really shouldnt say it cant take the iphone because it can!
Profile image icon for Predator
Predator @ Jul 28 9:33 PM
i agree john. it's a shame that the phone that could really take the fight to apple won't be coming to the states. i only hope the next HTC phone is not only armed to the teeth, but doped up on steroids and scare the holy hell out of apple.. and the name of this powerful force will not be Zeus (which is a good name by the way) but Cronos! lol. what do you think?
Profile image icon for John Walton
John Walton @ Jul 28 10:22 PM
Shiva, Nataraja, Kali... I think we've got some good themes for their next line. Creation through destruction!
Profile image icon for John Walton
John Walton @ Jul 28 8:05 PM
So, my primary question at this point: if Hero launches on AT&T, will GV be available in the Android Market for owners?
Profile image icon for Predator
Predator @ Jul 28 9:42 PM
i don't think apple would allow another app store on the same network that they are on. be android, palm or anyone else for that matter. because they don't want that phone to sit next to there iphone at retail outlets giving the buyer a different option.

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