For many years Apple has been ahead of the curve when it
comes to new computing technologies. It was the first to adopt the mini floppy
disk, and the first to abandon it. It led in the incorporation of WiFi and
Firewire and, in the MacBook Air the use of flash storage instead of spinning
drives for internal storage. Yet on near field communications (NFC) it is now
well behind the curve.
NFC was expected in the iPhone 4 and never appeared. It was very
widely expected to be a feature of the iPhone 5 but there is still no sign of
NFC in Apple's plans.
In an interview with AllThingsD immediately after Apple's unveiling of the iPhone 5, senior vice president of
worldwide marketing Phil Schiller justified the absence of NFC by saying that
Apple's Passbook app that will roll out with iOS 6 on September 19 "does
the kinds of things customer need today."
The sceptic's view of this might be that Apple faced some
undisclosed technical barrier to implementing NFC in the timeframe it had set
itself, but given the number of other manufacturers that have put NFC into
their phones this seems unlikely.
The cynic might suspect that Apple has decided it does not
need NFC to ensure that the iPhone 5 will sell by the million and has
deliberately held off adding NFC until the iPhone 6 in order to ensure a
significant differentiator for the next generation of the product.
According to Apple's announcement of iOS 6 Passbook appears to be nothing more than a means of organising content with bar
codes and displaying these on the screen.
"Passbook lets you scan your iPhone or iPod touch to
use a coupon, get into a concert or check into your hotel. Passbook
automatically displays your passes on your Lock Screen based on a specific time
or location, so when you walk into your favourite coffee shop your loyalty card
appears and you can scan it to buy a coffee or check your balance."
That functionality already exists today, on Apple and other
platforms, but implemented in specific ways for different applications. For
example an airline boarding pass can be sent as an email, displayed on the
screen and scanned. Yet despite this there is considerable momentum behind NFC.
It seems likely that the Comm Bank was anticipating NFC in
the iPhone 4 when it launched its Kaching mobile banking app in late 2011. Instead
it had to offer users, at a cost of $50, an NFC enabled case, the iCarte into
which to slip their iPhone.
The web site NFCWorld.com has a long list of NFC capable phones available today, and equally long list http://www.nfcworld.com/nfc-phones-list/#soon
of those that have been announced but are not yet on the market.
Deloitte in its Telecommunications Media and Technology
predictions released in January was extremely bullish about NFC in mobile
devices. It forecast that in 2012 shipments of devices equipped with NFC would
grow about 100 percent to almost 200 million. "In 2013 there may be as
many as 300 million NFC smartphones, tablets and eReaders sold. This compares
to a 2010 when fewer than 50 million devices were purchased," Deloitte
said.
"In the long run, NFC-enabled devices are likely to
find a wide array of uses – especially for payments. But even in 2012, NFC
capability will likely be used for a surprisingly diverse range of non-payment
applications, including gaming, security, authentication and information."
Only last month Australian company NFC Wireless announced
that it had got 50 businesses in the ski resort of Falls Creek trialling NFC to
provide information to potential customers.
Whatever the claims for Passbook, it is a proprietary
application as opposed to NFC, which is a basic communications technology, like
Bluetooth or WiFi that any application developer can exploit. With the number
of Android phone shipments now exceeding those of the iPhone the lack of NFC
support on the iPhone, and no indication of when it will be added, developers
might be looking first to NFC.
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