This post was triggered by a comment that Stephen Rey made on the post about Siri as an Android killer:
… But what do you think about the Android’s ” Iris ” . Do you think it can compete with Siri?

This post was triggered by a comment that Stephen Rey made on the post about Siri as an Android killer:
… But what do you think about the Android’s ” Iris ” . Do you think it can compete with Siri?

Should smartphones be smart? That is the question I should have asked earlier in the day. What I did ask was, Is an iPhone still a phone with Siri. I would have thought the answer was self-evident but of all people Andy Rubin (SVP of Mobile with Google) takes the contrary view.
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Could your cell phone become your ATM (automatic teller machine)? RBC Royal Bank seems to be moving in that direction. There’s a new mobile payment system by RBC that lets users text money from their mobile phones.
Already, more than 1,100 people have signed up for the RBC Mobex mobile payment service, which was launched last Tuesday for a trial run that wraps up in January with a consumer pilot program yet to be announced. In another technological advance in the works, RBC is lab-testing a system that would let users pay by waving their cellphones at the checkout instead of using a Visa credit card for small purchases.

It almost seems to be beyond the mobile future that Andy Rubin, Engineering Director, of Google foresees:
As Rubin mentions, already there is a incredible acceptance of the mobile phone as a necessary life support system:
There are currently about 3.2 billion mobile subscribers in the world, and that number is expected to grow by at least a billion in the next few years. Today, mobile phones are more prevalent than cars (about 800 million registered vehicles in the world) and credit cards (only 1.4 billion of those). While it took 100 years for landline phones to spread to more than 80% of the countries in the world, their wireless descendants did it in 16. So it’s safe to say that the mobile phone may be the most prolific consumer product ever invented.
Who could argue with that prognosis?
