Mozilla may have figured out a way to get its shiny orange and blue
Firefox phones into the hands of fans in the U.S. and U.K. But that
doesn't mean that analysts are any less skeptical about its chances.
The colorful ZTE Open sports Mozilla's Firefox OS.
Can a browser transform into a phone? Firefox maker Mozilla certainly
hopes so, but skepticism among analysts has been the backdrop to
Mozilla's claims of growing customer interest in its small, plasticky, and brightly colored Firefox phones.
Those phones have seen rapid expansion of availability in their first
month on the market, from initial sales only in Spain, to now include
Venezuela, Colombia, and soon eBay customers in the U.S. and the U.K.
The
Firefox
OS phones serve two purposes, according to Gartner analyst Carolina
Milanesi. She said that the development of Firefox OS is about Mozilla
"getting into the mobile space, and carriers being less dependent on
Android" for low-cost phones.
The carrier-free ZTE Open phone will be sold, including shipping, for
$79.99 in the U.S. and 59.99 pounds in the U.K. In the three other
countries, the phones are tied to carriers -- so far, that's meant only
Telefonica.
Christian Heilmann, Mozilla's principal developer evangelist, told CNET
that the phones have been well-received so far. "Feedback is quite
positive," he said, adding that most people are saying that they're
using the Firefox phone as "either a beginner phone, or a smartphone
that's replacing a feature phone."
And Li Gong, Mozilla's senior vice president for mobile devices and the
company's president of Asia operations, said that "one Chinese guy in
Spain wanted to buy 100 phones to take back to Hong Kong."
Mozilla is betting on attracting users based in part on the phone's low
prices, comparable to those of a feature phone, while telling developers
that building apps will be like building a Web site because the
operating system embraces HTML5 and CSS3.
"Writing a Firefox OS app is never a wasted effort. You can easily make a
HTML5 app to iOS, but not the other way around," Heilmann noted.
Some other selling points for the phones include the ability for in-app
purchases to be charged to the carrier, precluding the need for credit
cards, and the phones come with features that remain important in
developing markets, such as FM band radios built in.
Hanging success on those factors is not a sure thing, however.
Jan Dawson, the chief telecoms analyst at Ovum, said that Mozilla's
inability to get a U.S. or U.K. carrier to offer the phone reflects the
inherent weakness in the strategy.
"It's not clear to me really what Firefox OS offers that the mass-market
consumer can't get from somewhere else, and for better from somewhere
else," he added.
Milanesi agreed that carrier reliance could backfire for Mozilla. "I see
them depending a lot on the carrier branding, marketing, and push.
They're going to go as far as the carriers want them to go," she said.
"I don't see them being able to create demand from high loyalty."
The Geeksphone Keon.
The linchpin to Mozilla's mobile plan is coming up later this year.
Firefox phones are expected to launch in Brazil in the fourth quarter
with Telefonica Brasil. Milanesi described the Brazilian market as "very
demanding," in part because of the country's high import tariffs.
"Given that Alcatel has a presence there, this will be a big advantage
to them," she said. Alcatel makes the Firefox OS phone One Touch.
"I think Brazil is going to be a massive breakthrough," said Heilmann.
"We did a lot of [user experience] research finding out what people
need, things like the FM radio in the phone. The community there is
really, really excited."
It's hard to predict what a market that has a low smartphone saturation
will do once affordable smartphones are available. Dawson said that he's
basing much of his skepticism on the past being prelude.
"One of the fundamental challenges is whether you can monetize the
Firefox OS apps," he said, and added that even with the market dominance
of Android, people still spend more money on iOS apps. The big
question, he said, is how Mozilla will convince people to buy apps.
The opening screen of Firefox OS running on a Geeksphone Keon.
"I think [Firefox OS] is a good idea," said Milanesi. "If they did it
when Android had 40 percent of the market, possibly they'd succeed. But
with Android devices coming from Chinese players at $80 to $90, it's a
much more difficult play."
Beyond 2013, Mozilla will take a stab at some higher-end hardware in Japan with Sony, while it continues to push Firefox phones into newer low-cost markets like China and southeast Asia.
But even there the phones will face difficulties, said Mozilla's Li. "We
consider this a low-cost phone, but in some markets it's not low-cost
enough." China, Li said, will require a different strategy, along with
different hardware: most phones sold there are not supported by the
carriers, and China is a CDMA-band only country, not GSM or dual-band.
Perhaps the biggest hill the Firefox phone must climb in order to thrive
is one of perception. It doesn't have the backing of the billions of
dollars needed to compete with Android and iOS, as Windows Phone does,
and it's not clear yet that Web developers will migrate to HTML5 apps as
willingly as Mozilla claims they will.
Major redesigns for Firefox on desktops and on Android have paid off for
Mozilla in the past. Mobile phones, though, could be the snare that
catches the 'fox.



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