Providing Market Intelligence for 40 Years

In The News

OpenAI Eyes AI Agent Phone, Kuo Says

“OpenAI is not a hardware company and must prove its phone performs well against the competition in terms of memory, camera quality, size, weight, screen responsiveness — all of that can be a challenge for an organization without a hardware background,” noted Jennifer Kent, senior vice president and principal analyst at Parks Associates, a market research and consulting company specializing in consumer technology products, in Dallas.

She also pointed out that OpenAI’s strategy is to have an agent set on top of various apps and dominate interactions with end users. “Many developers will see that as an existential threat,” she told TechNewsWorld. “OpenAI will have to work to prove that app developers will thrive in an OpenAI operating system.”

“iOS and Android dominate the smartphone market, particularly in the U.S.,” she said. “Apple customers are particularly loyal, and all current players develop experiences that are better across device types and family members, if you stick within an ecosystem. This is a major barrier to consumers switching to a new OS.”

Kent added that consumer concerns about AI are very high. “ChatGPT’s user satisfaction rates, as measured by our Net Promoter Score, are low,” she explained. “OpenAI will need massive marketing to create consumer demand for an OpenAI smartphone.”

From the article, "OpenAI Eyes AI Agent Phone, Kuo Says" by John P. Mello Jr.

 

Previously In The News

Apple TV aims to capture 'cord cutters'

The new Apple TV will launch in late October at a starting price of $149. Apple TV has lagged rivals with similar devices. According to the research firm Parks Associates: Roku leads the US market...

Apple phone, tablet and TV fail to impress investors

Apple is coming from behind in the streaming media market. Nearly 20 percent of U.S. broadband households already own at least one media player that streams content from the Internet, according to res...

The next Apple TV puts company in rare role: Playing catch-up

The last three years have sparked an explosion in both top-notch streaming video and the number of devices that deliver that video to your TV. Companies like Roku, Amazon and Google have introduced ne...

Roku Drops Support for ‘Classic’ Streaming Boxes

When Roku launched its first product in May 2008, it was the first device able to stream Netflix to TVs. The company has since added more than 2,000 channels available through its platform, but older...