Around a year ago, I quite publically declared that I didn’t want an iPhone and never would. It’s not thats its a poor piece of techonology or anything, just that I always saw it as being a little pretentious.
You know the type; you’ll be sat in a pub wanting to mull the real world over when all they want to do is thrust the latest app they’ve downloaded in your face. They do this with such a self assured smugness that you’d swear that they’d invented the iPhone, not had it handed to them by their mobile phone provider.
I’m starting to change my mind a little though…..
It seems there are more to these apps than initially meet the eye; it appears that a measly phone is giving big players like the Sony PSP and the Nintendo DS a run for their money. Quite bizarre.
After just a few years in the industry, the Apple iPhone boasts over 21,000 game apps compared to the Nintendo DS which has over 3,500 titles or the Sony PSP which has just over 600. In defence of the Sony PSP, the majority of those 600 titles are large games created by recognised software houses whereas the majority of the 21,000 iPhone games are ‘bite-sized’ two quid offerings.
Personally I have always been of the disposition that if you are going to play a game on a mobile device then you probably want it bite sized anyway as you’re unlikely to get enough uninterrupted time to get immersed in a monster sized game. That having been said, with the latest iPhone boasting a faster processor and third generation Operating System there are already some fairly staggering games coming to market and some serious money is being pumped in to future game development.
The way the games are distributed is one of the main advantages the iPhone has over its competition. The Sony PSP for example uses mini optical discs that not only do users have to carry around with them but additionally distributors have to worry about the costs involved in producing and distributing the software to the gamer. The iPhone by comparison stores games in the internal memory of the phone and users simply download games directly from the Apple website rather than buying them in a more cumbersome physical format.
It will be interesting to see how the turning fortunes of Sony and Nintendo will affect any planned successors to the DS or PSP and it is becoming apparent that dedicated portable gaming systems may have their days numbered. Unfortunately for Nintendo this is a market that they have relied on heavily since they released the GameBoy back in 1989 and they are ill positioned to launch a competing product to the iPhone. I’m sure that Sony Ericsson will bring their own hybird device soon. They are one of the other formidable forces the mobile phone market and will more than likely give the iPhone a run for its money.
Chris Holgate writes a weekly article of all things tech related. He is a director and copyrighter of the online computer consumables business Refresh Cartridges who sell cheap ink cartridges,toner cartridges, computer hardware and other computer consumables online. An archive of his work can be found at www.computerarticles.co.uk.
Article from articlesbase.com
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