Daniel Langendorf at last100 has written an outstanding post, explaining how (if done right) the Gphone and not the iPhone will be the one to change the face of the wireless industry.
The post has accompanying graphics – Gphone concepts contributed by Lorin Wood, a previsualization designer who specializes in concepts and ideation for Hollywood. WoodÄôs concepts for last100 explored how Google applications, and its advertising, might look like on the Gphone.
Here’s a taste of what Dan wrote, but I recommend you click through to read the whole thing:
The iPhone sports a 2 megapixel camera. Google should at least match this, or maybe go one better if itÄôs feasible cost-wise. One way Google could differentiate its camera from others is not through megapixels but through image stabilization, which is now found on many point-and-shoot cameras and high-end lenses for digital cameras. Camera shake is prevalent in cell phone cameras Äî especially, it seems, on the iPhone Äî and including IS would do wonders to minimize shaky, soft, and slightly blurry images.
Video cameras on cell phones are nice to have, and are becoming more relevant in the era of YouTube. But cell phone video cameras suck. The ÄúfilmÄ? is grainy and its hard to do anything with the content other than watch it on the phone. A cell phone that could shoot 640 x 480 video, in an acceptable standard (like H.264), and allow people to do something with the content (email, download to a computer, upload to YouTube) would usher in a new wave of mobile content development.
Finally, the Google phone must include GPS, which is another complaint of the iPhone. […]
Read full post on last100. Also check out last100 editor Steve O’Hear’s post on the announcement of Nokia’s online music store, Ovi, which takes aim at Apple and mobile carriers.