ML
    • Recent
    • Categories
    • Tags
    • Popular
    • Users
    • Groups
    • Register
    • Login

    Google Pixel Phone

    News
    android google smartphone pixel phone
    12
    51
    5.9k
    Loading More Posts
    • Oldest to Newest
    • Newest to Oldest
    • Most Votes
    Reply
    • Reply as topic
    Log in to reply
    This topic has been deleted. Only users with topic management privileges can see it.
    • coliverC
      coliver @Kelly
      last edited by

      @Kelly said in Google Pixel Phone:

      @scottalanmiller said in Google Pixel Phone:

      @Kelly said in Google Pixel Phone:

      @scottalanmiller said in Google Pixel Phone:

      The best clone on the market, almost as good as the real thing.

      What I don't get is why they're copying the most stagnant platform on the market. Apple hasn't done any real innovation in a long time. Features the iPhone is just now getting in iOS X have been on the other platforms for a long time.

      Maybe because the market has loved the design from the beginning and now Google realizes that you don't need to change to be good. Who needs new phone features every year? No me, I just want one that works really well. You can call iPhone stagnant, but I felt that it worked better than Android four years ago when I switched and I feel it is better now. Android may have flailed in the meantime, but change for the sake of change isn't good. You need improvement.

      If you only copy the market leader then you are forgoing any differentiation that might allow you to compete. If someone offers me a Dr. Pepper vs a Mr. Pibb I will always take the Dr. Pepper even for slightly more. The same holds true in this case. With little/no differentiation the only market is the "never iPhone" group.

      Google also doesn't need to innovate. They have an huge open source community and many 3rd party vendors that are innovating for them. They are going to pull features from those vendors when they look to be stable enough to use. I'm in the "never iPhone" group so this phone doesn't really appeal to me... but, I think, it will have a bigger market then most people are expecting.

      KellyK 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • KellyK
        Kelly @coliver
        last edited by

        @coliver said in Google Pixel Phone:

        @Kelly said in Google Pixel Phone:

        @scottalanmiller said in Google Pixel Phone:

        @Kelly said in Google Pixel Phone:

        @scottalanmiller said in Google Pixel Phone:

        The best clone on the market, almost as good as the real thing.

        What I don't get is why they're copying the most stagnant platform on the market. Apple hasn't done any real innovation in a long time. Features the iPhone is just now getting in iOS X have been on the other platforms for a long time.

        Maybe because the market has loved the design from the beginning and now Google realizes that you don't need to change to be good. Who needs new phone features every year? No me, I just want one that works really well. You can call iPhone stagnant, but I felt that it worked better than Android four years ago when I switched and I feel it is better now. Android may have flailed in the meantime, but change for the sake of change isn't good. You need improvement.

        If you only copy the market leader then you are forgoing any differentiation that might allow you to compete. If someone offers me a Dr. Pepper vs a Mr. Pibb I will always take the Dr. Pepper even for slightly more. The same holds true in this case. With little/no differentiation the only market is the "never iPhone" group.

        Google also doesn't need to innovate. They have an huge open source community and many 3rd party vendors that are innovating for them. They are going to pull features from those vendors when they look to be stable enough to use. I'm in the "never iPhone" group so this phone doesn't really appeal to me... but, I think, it will have a bigger market then most people are expecting.

        I'm not necessarily dissing the phone, but the strategy. Merely copying the iPhone doesn't seem like enough to move the market. Makes me wonder if they're just trying do a proof of concept strategy rather than a truly competitive action.

        coliverC 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • coliverC
          coliver @Kelly
          last edited by

          @Kelly said in Google Pixel Phone:

          @coliver said in Google Pixel Phone:

          @Kelly said in Google Pixel Phone:

          @scottalanmiller said in Google Pixel Phone:

          @Kelly said in Google Pixel Phone:

          @scottalanmiller said in Google Pixel Phone:

          The best clone on the market, almost as good as the real thing.

          What I don't get is why they're copying the most stagnant platform on the market. Apple hasn't done any real innovation in a long time. Features the iPhone is just now getting in iOS X have been on the other platforms for a long time.

          Maybe because the market has loved the design from the beginning and now Google realizes that you don't need to change to be good. Who needs new phone features every year? No me, I just want one that works really well. You can call iPhone stagnant, but I felt that it worked better than Android four years ago when I switched and I feel it is better now. Android may have flailed in the meantime, but change for the sake of change isn't good. You need improvement.

          If you only copy the market leader then you are forgoing any differentiation that might allow you to compete. If someone offers me a Dr. Pepper vs a Mr. Pibb I will always take the Dr. Pepper even for slightly more. The same holds true in this case. With little/no differentiation the only market is the "never iPhone" group.

          Google also doesn't need to innovate. They have an huge open source community and many 3rd party vendors that are innovating for them. They are going to pull features from those vendors when they look to be stable enough to use. I'm in the "never iPhone" group so this phone doesn't really appeal to me... but, I think, it will have a bigger market then most people are expecting.

          I'm not necessarily dissing the phone, but the strategy. Merely copying the iPhone doesn't seem like enough to move the market. Makes me wonder if they're just trying do a proof of concept strategy rather than a truly competitive action.

          Is that true? It seems like Android is already a market leader and now Google is trying their best to polish the experience. This is going to take over the Nexus line. This is the reference phone that all the other manufactures will have to compete with and improve on. It's also, thankfully, still an Android device just with a traditional form factor that has been well received by the masses.

          scottalanmillerS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • scottalanmillerS
            scottalanmiller @coliver
            last edited by

            @coliver said in Google Pixel Phone:

            @Kelly said in Google Pixel Phone:

            @coliver said in Google Pixel Phone:

            @Kelly said in Google Pixel Phone:

            @scottalanmiller said in Google Pixel Phone:

            @Kelly said in Google Pixel Phone:

            @scottalanmiller said in Google Pixel Phone:

            The best clone on the market, almost as good as the real thing.

            What I don't get is why they're copying the most stagnant platform on the market. Apple hasn't done any real innovation in a long time. Features the iPhone is just now getting in iOS X have been on the other platforms for a long time.

            Maybe because the market has loved the design from the beginning and now Google realizes that you don't need to change to be good. Who needs new phone features every year? No me, I just want one that works really well. You can call iPhone stagnant, but I felt that it worked better than Android four years ago when I switched and I feel it is better now. Android may have flailed in the meantime, but change for the sake of change isn't good. You need improvement.

            If you only copy the market leader then you are forgoing any differentiation that might allow you to compete. If someone offers me a Dr. Pepper vs a Mr. Pibb I will always take the Dr. Pepper even for slightly more. The same holds true in this case. With little/no differentiation the only market is the "never iPhone" group.

            Google also doesn't need to innovate. They have an huge open source community and many 3rd party vendors that are innovating for them. They are going to pull features from those vendors when they look to be stable enough to use. I'm in the "never iPhone" group so this phone doesn't really appeal to me... but, I think, it will have a bigger market then most people are expecting.

            I'm not necessarily dissing the phone, but the strategy. Merely copying the iPhone doesn't seem like enough to move the market. Makes me wonder if they're just trying do a proof of concept strategy rather than a truly competitive action.

            Is that true? It seems like Android is already a market leader and now Google is trying their best to polish the experience. This is going to take over the Nexus line. This is the reference phone that all the other manufactures will have to compete with and improve on. It's also, thankfully, still an Android device just with a traditional form factor that has been well received by the masses.

            Android is the overall leader, iPhone is the single device leader.

            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • scottalanmillerS
              scottalanmiller @Kelly
              last edited by

              @Kelly said in Google Pixel Phone:

              @scottalanmiller said in Google Pixel Phone:

              @Kelly said in Google Pixel Phone:

              @scottalanmiller said in Google Pixel Phone:

              @Kelly said in Google Pixel Phone:

              @scottalanmiller said in Google Pixel Phone:

              The best clone on the market, almost as good as the real thing.

              What I don't get is why they're copying the most stagnant platform on the market. Apple hasn't done any real innovation in a long time. Features the iPhone is just now getting in iOS X have been on the other platforms for a long time.

              Maybe because the market has loved the design from the beginning and now Google realizes that you don't need to change to be good. Who needs new phone features every year? No me, I just want one that works really well. You can call iPhone stagnant, but I felt that it worked better than Android four years ago when I switched and I feel it is better now. Android may have flailed in the meantime, but change for the sake of change isn't good. You need improvement.

              If you only copy the market leader then you are forgoing any differentiation that might allow you to compete. If someone offers me a Dr. Pepper vs a Mr. Pibb I will always take the Dr. Pepper even for slightly more. The same holds true in this case. With little/no differentiation the only market is the "never iPhone" group.

              That's the thing, though, they do a ton of stuff. It is just the one, singular product that is copying the leader. It's just rounding out a portfolio, not replacing one.

              I'm not sure what you're getting at here. The intersection of competition between Google and Apple is their smartphone. This is Google's phone since they're no longer producing Nexus devices. Sure Google has a large portfolio, and as a larger strategy it might not be critical, but at this point of competition it makes no sense to me.

              Ah, well if you think of Google as phone maker, sure. But I don't. I think of them as a mobile platform maker - they make Android to compete with iOS. The making of Pixel is not to compete Google vs. Apple, but to make sure that the Android market doesn't have a gap in that space, which it did.

              DashrenderD 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • DashrenderD
                Dashrender
                last edited by

                I guess I'm lost on the it's an iPhone, it's not an iPhone schtick.

                The form factors for these things are so limited in what is really the ultimate in design, so the fact that they all look the same is not surprising at all.

                As for innovation - I guess I don't need constant innovation, I just want improvements, mainly in two areas. Speed and stability. A third area would be security.

                I do see Google's phones as nothing more than a reference by which other manufacturers will be judged and hopefully make better devices. Samsung has clearly been doing this, but at the expense of having all of the Samsung crapware on them (does Samsung actually make money from that crapware? do people use it enough to justify Samsung making it?)

                I no longer care about Android vs iOS, use whatever you like, just use an open platform to do your syncing so you're not stuck in a single environment.

                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • DashrenderD
                  Dashrender @scottalanmiller
                  last edited by

                  @scottalanmiller said in Google Pixel Phone:

                  @Kelly said in Google Pixel Phone:

                  @scottalanmiller said in Google Pixel Phone:

                  @Kelly said in Google Pixel Phone:

                  @scottalanmiller said in Google Pixel Phone:

                  @Kelly said in Google Pixel Phone:

                  @scottalanmiller said in Google Pixel Phone:

                  The best clone on the market, almost as good as the real thing.

                  What I don't get is why they're copying the most stagnant platform on the market. Apple hasn't done any real innovation in a long time. Features the iPhone is just now getting in iOS X have been on the other platforms for a long time.

                  Maybe because the market has loved the design from the beginning and now Google realizes that you don't need to change to be good. Who needs new phone features every year? No me, I just want one that works really well. You can call iPhone stagnant, but I felt that it worked better than Android four years ago when I switched and I feel it is better now. Android may have flailed in the meantime, but change for the sake of change isn't good. You need improvement.

                  If you only copy the market leader then you are forgoing any differentiation that might allow you to compete. If someone offers me a Dr. Pepper vs a Mr. Pibb I will always take the Dr. Pepper even for slightly more. The same holds true in this case. With little/no differentiation the only market is the "never iPhone" group.

                  That's the thing, though, they do a ton of stuff. It is just the one, singular product that is copying the leader. It's just rounding out a portfolio, not replacing one.

                  I'm not sure what you're getting at here. The intersection of competition between Google and Apple is their smartphone. This is Google's phone since they're no longer producing Nexus devices. Sure Google has a large portfolio, and as a larger strategy it might not be critical, but at this point of competition it makes no sense to me.

                  Ah, well if you think of Google as phone maker, sure. But I don't. I think of them as a mobile platform maker - they make Android to compete with iOS. The making of Pixel is not to compete Google vs. Apple, but to make sure that the Android market doesn't have a gap in that space, which it did.

                  What gap did Android have that was filled by the Samsung S7/Note 7?

                  scottalanmillerS coliverC 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • nadnerBN
                    nadnerB
                    last edited by

                    At the end of the day... same crap, different bucket.

                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • scottalanmillerS
                      scottalanmiller @Dashrender
                      last edited by

                      @Dashrender said in Google Pixel Phone:

                      @scottalanmiller said in Google Pixel Phone:

                      @Kelly said in Google Pixel Phone:

                      @scottalanmiller said in Google Pixel Phone:

                      @Kelly said in Google Pixel Phone:

                      @scottalanmiller said in Google Pixel Phone:

                      @Kelly said in Google Pixel Phone:

                      @scottalanmiller said in Google Pixel Phone:

                      The best clone on the market, almost as good as the real thing.

                      What I don't get is why they're copying the most stagnant platform on the market. Apple hasn't done any real innovation in a long time. Features the iPhone is just now getting in iOS X have been on the other platforms for a long time.

                      Maybe because the market has loved the design from the beginning and now Google realizes that you don't need to change to be good. Who needs new phone features every year? No me, I just want one that works really well. You can call iPhone stagnant, but I felt that it worked better than Android four years ago when I switched and I feel it is better now. Android may have flailed in the meantime, but change for the sake of change isn't good. You need improvement.

                      If you only copy the market leader then you are forgoing any differentiation that might allow you to compete. If someone offers me a Dr. Pepper vs a Mr. Pibb I will always take the Dr. Pepper even for slightly more. The same holds true in this case. With little/no differentiation the only market is the "never iPhone" group.

                      That's the thing, though, they do a ton of stuff. It is just the one, singular product that is copying the leader. It's just rounding out a portfolio, not replacing one.

                      I'm not sure what you're getting at here. The intersection of competition between Google and Apple is their smartphone. This is Google's phone since they're no longer producing Nexus devices. Sure Google has a large portfolio, and as a larger strategy it might not be critical, but at this point of competition it makes no sense to me.

                      Ah, well if you think of Google as phone maker, sure. But I don't. I think of them as a mobile platform maker - they make Android to compete with iOS. The making of Pixel is not to compete Google vs. Apple, but to make sure that the Android market doesn't have a gap in that space, which it did.

                      What gap did Android have that was filled by the Samsung S7/Note 7?

                      I don't understand the question. What does Samsung or Samsung's phones have to do with the conversation?

                      DashrenderD JaredBuschJ 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • coliverC
                        coliver @Dashrender
                        last edited by

                        @Dashrender said in Google Pixel Phone:

                        @scottalanmiller said in Google Pixel Phone:

                        @Kelly said in Google Pixel Phone:

                        @scottalanmiller said in Google Pixel Phone:

                        @Kelly said in Google Pixel Phone:

                        @scottalanmiller said in Google Pixel Phone:

                        @Kelly said in Google Pixel Phone:

                        @scottalanmiller said in Google Pixel Phone:

                        The best clone on the market, almost as good as the real thing.

                        What I don't get is why they're copying the most stagnant platform on the market. Apple hasn't done any real innovation in a long time. Features the iPhone is just now getting in iOS X have been on the other platforms for a long time.

                        Maybe because the market has loved the design from the beginning and now Google realizes that you don't need to change to be good. Who needs new phone features every year? No me, I just want one that works really well. You can call iPhone stagnant, but I felt that it worked better than Android four years ago when I switched and I feel it is better now. Android may have flailed in the meantime, but change for the sake of change isn't good. You need improvement.

                        If you only copy the market leader then you are forgoing any differentiation that might allow you to compete. If someone offers me a Dr. Pepper vs a Mr. Pibb I will always take the Dr. Pepper even for slightly more. The same holds true in this case. With little/no differentiation the only market is the "never iPhone" group.

                        That's the thing, though, they do a ton of stuff. It is just the one, singular product that is copying the leader. It's just rounding out a portfolio, not replacing one.

                        I'm not sure what you're getting at here. The intersection of competition between Google and Apple is their smartphone. This is Google's phone since they're no longer producing Nexus devices. Sure Google has a large portfolio, and as a larger strategy it might not be critical, but at this point of competition it makes no sense to me.

                        Ah, well if you think of Google as phone maker, sure. But I don't. I think of them as a mobile platform maker - they make Android to compete with iOS. The making of Pixel is not to compete Google vs. Apple, but to make sure that the Android market doesn't have a gap in that space, which it did.

                        What gap did Android have that was filled by the Samsung S7/Note 7?

                        We're talking about the Pixel. The gap the Pixel filled was the same one that the Nexus tried to fill. A solid, stable, reference device that should compete directly with the iPhone but also to keep the other vendors on their toes and force them to differentiate the market.

                        DashrenderD J 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                        • DashrenderD
                          Dashrender @scottalanmiller
                          last edited by

                          @scottalanmiller said in Google Pixel Phone:

                          I don't understand the question. What does Samsung or Samsung's phones have to do with the conversation?

                          You said:

                          @scottalanmiller said in Google Pixel Phone:

                          The making of Pixel is not to compete Google vs. Apple, but to make sure that the Android market doesn't have a gap in that space, which it did.

                          So I'm asking, what gap?

                          I continue on and presume that if there was a gap, that that gap would be filled by Samsung's offerings.

                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • DashrenderD
                            Dashrender @coliver
                            last edited by

                            @coliver said in Google Pixel Phone:

                            @Dashrender said in Google Pixel Phone:

                            @scottalanmiller said in Google Pixel Phone:

                            @Kelly said in Google Pixel Phone:

                            @scottalanmiller said in Google Pixel Phone:

                            @Kelly said in Google Pixel Phone:

                            @scottalanmiller said in Google Pixel Phone:

                            @Kelly said in Google Pixel Phone:

                            @scottalanmiller said in Google Pixel Phone:

                            The best clone on the market, almost as good as the real thing.

                            What I don't get is why they're copying the most stagnant platform on the market. Apple hasn't done any real innovation in a long time. Features the iPhone is just now getting in iOS X have been on the other platforms for a long time.

                            Maybe because the market has loved the design from the beginning and now Google realizes that you don't need to change to be good. Who needs new phone features every year? No me, I just want one that works really well. You can call iPhone stagnant, but I felt that it worked better than Android four years ago when I switched and I feel it is better now. Android may have flailed in the meantime, but change for the sake of change isn't good. You need improvement.

                            If you only copy the market leader then you are forgoing any differentiation that might allow you to compete. If someone offers me a Dr. Pepper vs a Mr. Pibb I will always take the Dr. Pepper even for slightly more. The same holds true in this case. With little/no differentiation the only market is the "never iPhone" group.

                            That's the thing, though, they do a ton of stuff. It is just the one, singular product that is copying the leader. It's just rounding out a portfolio, not replacing one.

                            I'm not sure what you're getting at here. The intersection of competition between Google and Apple is their smartphone. This is Google's phone since they're no longer producing Nexus devices. Sure Google has a large portfolio, and as a larger strategy it might not be critical, but at this point of competition it makes no sense to me.

                            Ah, well if you think of Google as phone maker, sure. But I don't. I think of them as a mobile platform maker - they make Android to compete with iOS. The making of Pixel is not to compete Google vs. Apple, but to make sure that the Android market doesn't have a gap in that space, which it did.

                            What gap did Android have that was filled by the Samsung S7/Note 7?

                            We're talking about the Pixel. The gap the Pixel filled was the same one that the Nexus tried to fill. A solid, stable, reference device that should compete directly with the iPhone but also to keep the other vendors on their toes and force them to differentiate the market.

                            Oh, so the gap was that Apple has a pure iOS only device and that on the Android side of the house, there was no such purist Android thing.. so the Nexus, and now the Pixel fills that gap.

                            I guess my next thought is.. who cares? No really? from a mass consumer point of view, who cares? normal users don't care if it's plain Android of Samsung's bastardization of Android on their device, as long as it works.

                            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote -1
                            • JaredBuschJ
                              JaredBusch @scottalanmiller
                              last edited by

                              @scottalanmiller said in Google Pixel Phone:

                              @Dashrender said in Google Pixel Phone:

                              @scottalanmiller said in Google Pixel Phone:

                              @Kelly said in Google Pixel Phone:

                              @scottalanmiller said in Google Pixel Phone:

                              @Kelly said in Google Pixel Phone:

                              @scottalanmiller said in Google Pixel Phone:

                              @Kelly said in Google Pixel Phone:

                              @scottalanmiller said in Google Pixel Phone:

                              The best clone on the market, almost as good as the real thing.

                              What I don't get is why they're copying the most stagnant platform on the market. Apple hasn't done any real innovation in a long time. Features the iPhone is just now getting in iOS X have been on the other platforms for a long time.

                              Maybe because the market has loved the design from the beginning and now Google realizes that you don't need to change to be good. Who needs new phone features every year? No me, I just want one that works really well. You can call iPhone stagnant, but I felt that it worked better than Android four years ago when I switched and I feel it is better now. Android may have flailed in the meantime, but change for the sake of change isn't good. You need improvement.

                              If you only copy the market leader then you are forgoing any differentiation that might allow you to compete. If someone offers me a Dr. Pepper vs a Mr. Pibb I will always take the Dr. Pepper even for slightly more. The same holds true in this case. With little/no differentiation the only market is the "never iPhone" group.

                              That's the thing, though, they do a ton of stuff. It is just the one, singular product that is copying the leader. It's just rounding out a portfolio, not replacing one.

                              I'm not sure what you're getting at here. The intersection of competition between Google and Apple is their smartphone. This is Google's phone since they're no longer producing Nexus devices. Sure Google has a large portfolio, and as a larger strategy it might not be critical, but at this point of competition it makes no sense to me.

                              Ah, well if you think of Google as phone maker, sure. But I don't. I think of them as a mobile platform maker - they make Android to compete with iOS. The making of Pixel is not to compete Google vs. Apple, but to make sure that the Android market doesn't have a gap in that space, which it did.

                              What gap did Android have that was filled by the Samsung S7/Note 7?

                              I don't understand the question. What does Samsung or Samsung's phones have to do with the conversation?

                              Nothing. He is conflating points as per normal.

                              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                              • J
                                Jason Banned
                                last edited by

                                I just bought the Nexus 6P.. I think I'm returning it and going back to my iPhone 6. Mostly because of the Bluetooth issues and with the Pixel coming out it's confirmed google will abandon and stop supporting the nexus line. Sad espcially since I like vanillia android and the openness compared to iOS but at least things work on iOS..

                                stacksofplatesS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                • J
                                  Jason Banned @coliver
                                  last edited by

                                  @coliver said in Google Pixel Phone:

                                  We're talking about the Pixel. The gap the Pixel filled was the same one that the Nexus tried to fill. A solid, stable, reference device that should compete directly with the iPhone but also to keep the other vendors on their toes and force them to differentiate the market.

                                  Except the Pixel will be 1.) way more expensive. 2.) not vanilla android.

                                  KellyK 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                  • KellyK
                                    Kelly @Jason
                                    last edited by

                                    @Jason said in Google Pixel Phone:

                                    @coliver said in Google Pixel Phone:

                                    We're talking about the Pixel. The gap the Pixel filled was the same one that the Nexus tried to fill. A solid, stable, reference device that should compete directly with the iPhone but also to keep the other vendors on their toes and force them to differentiate the market.

                                    Except the Pixel will be 1.) way more expensive. 2.) not vanilla android.

                                    Exactly. This is a reduction in both competition and innovation rather than the reverse. They're offering an undifferentiated device at an undifferentiated price point and abandoning the reverse competitive position. This is what I do not understand.

                                    J scottalanmillerS 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                    • J
                                      Jason Banned @Kelly
                                      last edited by Jason

                                      @Kelly said in Google Pixel Phone:

                                      Exactly. This is a reduction in both competition and innovation rather than the reverse. They're offering an undifferentiated device at an undifferentiated price point and abandoning the reverse competitive position. This is what I do not understand.

                                      Yup makes me not care for android. I don't want a Device that takes forever to get updates, nor do I want the bloated and expensive ones that Samsung makes. So there is no market that matches my needs on Android anymore. Nexus fit that perfectly.

                                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                      • scottalanmillerS
                                        scottalanmiller @Kelly
                                        last edited by

                                        @Kelly said in Google Pixel Phone:

                                        @Jason said in Google Pixel Phone:

                                        @coliver said in Google Pixel Phone:

                                        We're talking about the Pixel. The gap the Pixel filled was the same one that the Nexus tried to fill. A solid, stable, reference device that should compete directly with the iPhone but also to keep the other vendors on their toes and force them to differentiate the market.

                                        Except the Pixel will be 1.) way more expensive. 2.) not vanilla android.

                                        Exactly. This is a reduction in both competition and innovation rather than the reverse. They're offering an undifferentiated device at an undifferentiated price point and abandoning the reverse competitive position. This is what I do not understand.

                                        They are adding options to the market, how does that reduce competition or innovation?

                                        KellyK 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                        • KellyK
                                          Kelly @scottalanmiller
                                          last edited by

                                          @scottalanmiller said in Google Pixel Phone:

                                          @Kelly said in Google Pixel Phone:

                                          @Jason said in Google Pixel Phone:

                                          @coliver said in Google Pixel Phone:

                                          We're talking about the Pixel. The gap the Pixel filled was the same one that the Nexus tried to fill. A solid, stable, reference device that should compete directly with the iPhone but also to keep the other vendors on their toes and force them to differentiate the market.

                                          Except the Pixel will be 1.) way more expensive. 2.) not vanilla android.

                                          Exactly. This is a reduction in both competition and innovation rather than the reverse. They're offering an undifferentiated device at an undifferentiated price point and abandoning the reverse competitive position. This is what I do not understand.

                                          They are adding options to the market, how does that reduce competition or innovation?

                                          They are removing options from the market that were differentiated in both price and configuration, and replacing it with an option that is neither.

                                          scottalanmillerS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                          • scottalanmillerS
                                            scottalanmiller @Kelly
                                            last edited by

                                            @Kelly said in Google Pixel Phone:

                                            @scottalanmiller said in Google Pixel Phone:

                                            @Kelly said in Google Pixel Phone:

                                            @Jason said in Google Pixel Phone:

                                            @coliver said in Google Pixel Phone:

                                            We're talking about the Pixel. The gap the Pixel filled was the same one that the Nexus tried to fill. A solid, stable, reference device that should compete directly with the iPhone but also to keep the other vendors on their toes and force them to differentiate the market.

                                            Except the Pixel will be 1.) way more expensive. 2.) not vanilla android.

                                            Exactly. This is a reduction in both competition and innovation rather than the reverse. They're offering an undifferentiated device at an undifferentiated price point and abandoning the reverse competitive position. This is what I do not understand.

                                            They are adding options to the market, how does that reduce competition or innovation?

                                            They are removing options from the market that were differentiated in both price and configuration, and replacing it with an option that is neither.

                                            Do you mean removing the Nexus?

                                            KellyK 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                            • 1
                                            • 2
                                            • 3
                                            • 1 / 3
                                            • First post
                                              Last post