The a16z Show - a16z Podcast: What Comes After the Smartphone

Episode Date: October 22, 2015

Technology is a progression of new ideas and new platforms gobbling up the one that came before. In the world of computers we went from mainframes to mini computers to PCs. And then came the mobile ph...one, which, in the form of the smartphone, has dwarfed them all. But what does that to mobile? When you have already gotten to everybody on earth, what comes along that is 10X the size? a16z’s Benedict Evans and Steven Sinofsky offer their thoughts on where technology is today, why the perfection of the current crop of PCs signals the category’s collapse, and what happens after the smartphone. Stay Updated:Find a16z on YouTube: YouTubeFind a16z on XFind a16z on LinkedInListen to the a16z Show on SpotifyListen to the a16z Show on Apple PodcastsFollow our host: https://twitter.com/eriktorenberg Please note that the content here is for informational purposes only; should NOT be taken as legal, business, tax, or investment advice or be used to evaluate any investment or security; and is not directed at any investors or potential investors in any a16z fund. a16z and its affiliates may maintain investments in the companies discussed. For more details please see a16z.com/disclosures. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

Transcript
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Starting point is 00:00:00 Welcome to the A16Z podcast. I'm Michael Copeland. Technology is a progression of new ideas and new platforms gobbling up the one that came before. In the world of computers, we went from mainframes to mini computers to PCs, and then came the mobile phone, which, in the form of the smartphone, has dwarfed them all. But what does that to mobile? When you have already gotten to everybody on Earth, what comes along next that is 10x the size? A16Z's Benedict Evans and Stephen Sinovsky offer their thoughts on where technology is today
Starting point is 00:00:35 and what comes after the smartphone on this segment of the A16Z podcast. Stephen Benedict, welcome. Hello, hello. Let's talk about the reception of two devices that recently launched and what that says about how technology works and how technology changes. First, there was iPhone 6-S,
Starting point is 00:00:55 and there was this sense, you know, poor Apple, Everyone's so excited and expecting so much. And then in the case of the success, there was this sort of sentiment, oh, the beauty's all on the inside. Isn't that sort of boring? And then on the flip side, Microsoft launched its latest surface. And the tech community broadly kind of applauded it for moving technology forward. Like how great. Look at the innovation.
Starting point is 00:01:23 Things are moving forward in a way that gets us all excited. There's the magic. So looking at these two devices, what does that say about where we are in technology and where we're headed? Well, there's kind of an interesting contrast here that you've got, sort of the feeling you have in mobile right now is we're kind of at the end of one wave and we haven't got another wave coming up yet. So we've kind of had the smartphone wars and Apple and Google both kind of won and we've had the messaging wars and Facebook and WhatsApp and Instagram and so on happened. And there isn't some new thing. and you look at the new flagship phones from Apple or Samsung or Xiaomi or what have you, and they kind of look like the last year's phones.
Starting point is 00:02:02 And so that feels like we're kind of on a flattening part of the S-curve. And then you look at, you know, the iPad Pro or the Surface or Chromebook and what have you. And it feels like there's a lot of stuff kind of changing here. And it's sort of, wow, this is a completely new way of doing things, except, of course, for, you know, laptops, which are probably not a terribly new concept. So you've got these kind of interesting contrast between where the individuals, sits and how you should think about well where is which bit of these which of these sit in which part of the curve and the way I suppose the way I tend to think about this is there's a um the things
Starting point is 00:02:36 tend to look best and they tend to look most refined and they tend to have all the really coolest stuff just before they're about to be completely obsolete and so you get absolutely the best sailing ships at the end of the 19th century and you know the best battleships are built in 1945 and you know absolutely that the best ever spy planes are built just before satellites come in and make spy planes kind of pointless, or one kind of spy plane pointless. Spy planes that don't have missiles on them become pointless. Right, that circled endlessly for hours and hours and then eventually got shot down. Yeah, exactly.
Starting point is 00:03:09 And so it looks like, okay, oh, now finally this thing is perfect. So you look at the Surface Pro and you think, okay, at last the PC has been perfected, it's got everything you could possibly want, this is it, it's one. and then in contrast you look at the smartphone and you think yeah this is kind of boring nothing much new is happening here and you could kind of look at it the other way around
Starting point is 00:03:32 I think that what's happening in the kind of the PC world is it's being perfected because it's kind of over right let's be clear you're calling the end of the PC world yeah and in contrast the smartphone world is kind of only just going and that what's happening is like we've built the platform and now you get this explosion of innovation on top of that platform.
Starting point is 00:03:52 I think that's, for me, that's the, the, definitely the most, the most key thing that's really going on is that people have to internalize, like, where, how platforms innovate and diffuse, and how, where they go from, from one stage to another. And so what, what's happening in mobile is the underpinnings have started to, started to solidify. And I wouldn't say boring, but I think that they've become, like, predictable in the sense that you're going to get more capabilities, more sensors, better battery lines, you know, more interesting, thinner, smarter devices and things, and they will get better.
Starting point is 00:04:25 And we will someday reach this point where there's no way you could perfect that particular, you know, six-inch form factor or something like that. But what's really happening now is the innovation has just moved up the stack. And now you're just going to start to see like constellations of innovation. Benedict mentioned messaging. And that was certainly one where there were dozens and dozens of companies and new ones all the time. but now there's a center of gravity that's very substantial. But playing it forward, you know, it's not like banking has been settled.
Starting point is 00:04:56 It's not like entertainment's been settled. It's certainly not like productivity has been settled. But the activity is massive building on this stability. In fact, one of the maturing stages of the PC was when the web came along and started being innovative across all of the PCs. Yeah, so I read a PC the other day called sort of the smartphone is not a neutral platform, saying that, you know, unlike, say, a web browser on either a Windows or a Mac, where the web browser was the platform and the Windows or the Mac computer wasn't really
Starting point is 00:05:25 where you were building internet services, whereas on a smartphone, not only you're building in the web browser and inside apps, but you've got all this other stuff going on that Apple and Google are building integrated services deeply into it. So you've got all this innovation happening in how you're going to use the device. But the device itself is kind of set. Like now we know, okay, it's roughly the size, it's got these capabilities, the performance, has grown to the point that you can do all these things that you wanted to do three years ago or four years ago but can't do the battery life and the location and so it's all there. So you've got this kind of Cambrian explosion of innovation on top of the smartphone now that that's become
Starting point is 00:05:59 like a relatively solid platform where you kind of know what you're dealing with and all these things have become possible. Does that then shift the center of power or the centers of gravity? I mean away from Apple and or handset manufacturers in general. Well I think there's a kind of a fundamental change going on here, which is that there are something like 300 and 325 million PCs sold a year, and there's about 1.5 billion PCs on Earth. And there are about one and a half, there are about 2 billion mobile phones sold every year, and almost all of those will become smartphones in the next couple of years, well over a billion are now. And so we'll go to 2 billion smartphones if you add in tablets maybe 2.5, as opposed to 300 million PCs. And we'll go to
Starting point is 00:06:38 five to six billion of those in use in any given time around the world, although, you know, in use depends on how much money you've gone, where you are, and so on. And so you get to this ecosystem that's just in order of magnitude bigger. And of course, that's happened before. So you went from mainframes to mini-computers and you went from mini-computers to workstations and workstations to PCs. Yeah, it's actually, let me just put some numbers so that people can understand, like what we're really talking about. Like, the mainframe world, the whole world of mainframes was probably less than 100,000 mainframe computers. Actually, kind of an interesting stat was But they didn't use it to measure mainframes in terms of, like, actual boxes.
Starting point is 00:07:12 They measured them in the MIPS delivered. And so IBM used to be measured, like, how many MIPS are actually in use at any given time. And so at the height of MIP utilization, there were about 11.1 million Mips, like, active, like, on the books, which is roughly 200 MacBooks. And, like, you think about that, and you're like, wow, that's crazy. You know, there were about, like, at the height of word processors, so this is before there were, like, software word processors. There were these things you would buy for typists in an organization that were dedicated, and they were from companies like Wong or Sperry or things like that. There were maybe 500,000 to a million of those in total, and most of them in the government. Like, it was sort of like a 1984 image.
Starting point is 00:07:57 And then, you know, the mini computer. So there were maybe just over a million digital equipment mini computers. To Benedict's earlier point, if you were using a digital equipment Vax computer in like 1988, 89, they came out with the last version of VMS software, and it was the most amazing thing you've ever seen. They had whatever programming language you wanted to support, they had full support across the platform, they had distributed systems, they had the best shell, they had like the best tape drives and disc drives and peripherals. And it was all, it fit together. There was this beautiful poster I used to have in my office of all.
Starting point is 00:08:34 all of the parts and then nobody bought it. Like, in fact, they evaporated, like, seemingly overnight because it was over. The PC had already showed up. There were about five to six million Apple twos that ever got sold. That, I believe. Wow. But here's interesting one. There were about 17 million Commodore 64s.
Starting point is 00:08:52 Why is that? Because it broke into the sort of the den in the living room, not just like the garage and the office. And then Ben, as it gave the PC numbers, maybe, you know, now we're at a 1.5 billion in solid base. What was the number for how many have ever been sold? I think you are about four and a half billion from memory. Ever, you know, and then the smartphone, the numbers. And so the interesting thing is for each of those, they, they, they didn't sell, like the first people to buy minis weren't the people who bought all the mainframes. They
Starting point is 00:09:23 were all the people who didn't buy the mainframe. And for the people who bought like the PCs, they weren't all the people who bought everything that came before. In fact, the first ones, I had a job. I was to go and give them. to the people who didn't have word processors. Like I carted them around. And they were happy to get them, I'm sure. And the people who had word processors said, well, I have to use this to get my job done. And I'm not using that.
Starting point is 00:09:44 That's a toy. Right. So what you're talking about, though, is this phase then after the phone. And that's what you're starting to imagine. Well, and I think what, like, we were sort of pondering was like, what do you do to sell the next thing? Because everybody's got the device. Where's the market that's more than the phone? because to Stephen's point about who it was that you sold to,
Starting point is 00:10:08 you didn't create the PC industry by converting mainframe customers. You created that by building this new industry that was 100 times bigger, and that left mainframes and minis and workstations just completely marooned. And that is now really what's happening with mobile. It's that first of all, mobile becomes much bigger than PC, but PC continues in parallel. Then mobile leaves PC marooned and maroon PC will kind of start to shrink away. to a much smaller base over time. But what does that to mobile?
Starting point is 00:10:38 What comes along that's 10x bigger than mobile that is your next generational change when you've already got to everybody on Earth? So there isn't another generational change of that kind. It has to work in some other way. Do you think that that has to happen? I mean, given the history of technology and how we do things,
Starting point is 00:10:54 is there going to be another thing that can be 10x bigger than the phone? Well, of course, one of the things that's going to be interesting is all of the software that gets written on top of these. And so that itself is, it already is 10x. And maybe that's the thing then. Right. And so what I, what, for me, what's so fascinating is, is that don't think about the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the platform shift and the revolution, we tend to
Starting point is 00:11:16 manifest it in terms of the, the physical device. And we think about it as the shape or the size, which leads to all the confusion over tablet or this or that. And like, like, Benedict loves to point out, like, the huge shift in the supply chain that's really going on. So one of the things is like iot is going to be bigger there are definitely going to be more of these devices right that are iot but how are those going to get built on what ecosystem and how are they going to mostly they're going to be smartphone components so not when you get down to you know the 10 cent device or the five cent sensor and what have you but an awful lot of this stuff is um it's actually smartphone components i mean it's obviously like a thermostat or drone or all of those kinds of
Starting point is 00:11:55 things are basically just smartphone with smartphones with wings um and how is it going to get online when you're in your home, how are you going to control this stuff? What's all going to be connected up to? It's kind of going to be connected up to the smartphone ecosystem. So it's not immediately obvious that IOT creates this whole separate ecosystem that you can use to create new, bigger companies that come in and crush Apple and Google and, you know, Samsung and Arm and Qualcomm and so on. It feels like those are kind of extensions of this business rather than, you know, the next generation that's much bigger. You can imagine in the IOT future that instead of, you know, one or two phones per person, It's 10 things per person or 20 things or hundreds.
Starting point is 00:12:32 You won't even know. And we won't count how many, even how many screens we have. But I would definitely say that the stitching them together, it's definitely going to happen via the cloud. There's going to be a notion of identity. There's going to be shared experience and coding because there's only so many operating systems people are going to do things for. But also, like, they're not all going to be self-contained.
Starting point is 00:12:58 like your light bulb is up in the ceiling. You're not going to have 15 ecosystems in your home and 15 gateway devices. You're going to have like maybe three and a bunch of overlapping van diagrams. But yeah, the light bulb is going to talk to the phone or the thermostat or something. And your light bulb's not going to have a screen that I program it on either. Not only that, you're not, and you're not even going to like buy this light bulb kit that comes with a separate screen that they all connect to. Which is kind of where we are right now, right? Right now.
Starting point is 00:13:24 We're in a kit mode. You're in a kit mode. You go by a door lock and like it might have an adieu. app, but it's likely to connect to a special hub that that door lock uses. Yeah, my garage door opener came with, like, its own router hub thing. Yeah, it's like your home has got AC and DC and D.C. And you've got 110 volt and 240 volt and 5 volt in different bits of your home for different stuff.
Starting point is 00:13:43 And you need different plugs. Well, actually, in America, you do have different plugs. But I think what really people are also underestimating is just the, and why we're so bullish on the growth opportunities or just the opportunity to build. whole new ecosystems on top of all of this. Back when the PC was taking hold, the debate was over operating systems and then graphical interfaces.
Starting point is 00:14:07 And, you know, people underestimated the impact of just having office on PCs, which created a whole, almost a separate layer in the whole ecosystem that was equal in size to the operating system. The same thing happened on mainframes. Like, the mainframes were interesting, but really look at Oracle and the databases that got created.
Starting point is 00:14:25 And then once Oracle got created, you look at the SAPs of the world. And then what happened in the web is the same thing. Like you end up with these whole new companies built on top of that infrastructure, which often dwarf the infrastructure. And I think that the IoT space is going to be huge, but it's going to not necessarily be like a whole new one, like a whole new thing.
Starting point is 00:14:46 It's just going to be built on top of this framework, which is going to be very empowering for that whole ecosystem, starting all the way at the people who make arm chips, all the way through the supply chain, through the phones. and those companies are going to be in the position to drive the kind of software support that people have and create it. And as Bennett was pointing out, the services that you use are going to be sort of integral to the whole experience. Because if you make like garage door openers or light bulbs or control things, you're not, there's a lot of stuff you're not going to know how to do.
Starting point is 00:15:15 And so relying on that is going to be super important. I think there's a kind of a thread that runs through this, which is this sense of the UK system that, you know, in the 80s or 90s, if you wanted to put computer into something, you use PC. you know if you had an ATM or you know a kiosk or a piece of machine tool or something it would be running a PC in some sense they're like the three million ATMs on Earth all one ran Windows XP until quite recently and today you wouldn't do that today you'd use mobile components instead of Intel components and you would use smartphone operating system so you'd use Android or you know if it's in the Apple ecosystem it would be connected into iOS and that whole ecosystem it just becomes much bigger and just leaves swamps the other ecosystem in terms of where all the innovation and all the scale effects can be.
Starting point is 00:15:57 So just, you know, sort of kind of an unfair but relevant comparison, you know, the Wintel ecosystem now as a percentage of total computing, so including tablets and smartphones and everything else, is now sort of 15% of unit sales. And it's going to go down, it's going to go maybe not 10%, but, you know, it may go down to 10%. And that's kind of where PowerPC and MacOS were in the early 90s. And you get the same kind of effect of, you know,
Starting point is 00:16:22 people making a decision about where they're going to put their investment. and where all the innovation is going to get centered. It's all going to get centered into that new ecosystem. And so back to the thing I was saying at the beginning about, you know, look at the Surface Pro or the MacBook or the – so you look at the Surface Pro and you put the iPad Pro and you put the MacBook, the new Apple MacBook next to it, and you put like an iPhone success and you put like a Lumia next to it.
Starting point is 00:16:46 And of course – because that means that I mentioned Illumia is because you can plug a screen and a keyboard and a mouse into it and it's running Windows 10. So theoretically that's – well, not in practice. That is actually a PC. Right. And so it's like a Lumia is almost like a Mac Mini with a screen. You know, it's basically the same thing. Right.
Starting point is 00:17:00 With a screen and a battery. So you look at all these things and you get these industry analysis firms going, well, that's a tablet and that's not a tablet. That's a PC with a removable keyboard. And that's a smartphone with a removable keyboard. And it's like you can put all these definitions together, but actually the only distinction that's meaningful between them is, well, which of these are based on the future and which of these are based on the past.
Starting point is 00:17:24 Or which ecosystem are they on? Are they on the ecosystem that has all of the scale and all of the growth and where all the innovation is going to be focused, whether that's the chips or the software or everything else? Or are they on the ecosystem that really kind of doesn't have that anymore and is kind of get left behind? Which is, you know, to my point about, you know, the best ever sailing ships being produced at the end of the 19th century.
Starting point is 00:17:46 You know, that's kind of where something like a Surface Pro is next to the iPad Pro in that, you know, the first sailing ship, the first steamships, needed masks and they kept breaking down and, you know, people weren't quite sure how to build them and they kept sinking and so on. But that was kind of on the upward curve. And the sailing ships, on the other hand, were much better and much faster for about, you know, for a little bit longer, but they were on the flat part of the curve. And I think this is kind of where the whole like X86 Windows architecture is, you know, that whole environment is like it's perfect, but that's, but it's reached a logical conclusion. Think of it this way. Like you're, you're just an innovative
Starting point is 00:18:21 electrical engineer or mechanical engineer and you develop a way to sense something in the environment. It doesn't matter what it is, but you need the rest of the compute platform to do something. Are you going to go and pitch it, like, which chip manufacturer do you want your sensor to be tightly integrated in?
Starting point is 00:18:37 Like, it's not just a unit sales, it's the chip manufacturer that has the health to absorb it at the software level, the firmware level, the integration level. And this is, you know, Ben had mentioned the power PC, and this is basically what happened to Apple. It was like, it was just too small to support the innovation at the scale needed to compete with what was going on at Intel.
Starting point is 00:18:57 And like there just weren't enough electrical engineers designing chips to be competitive. So let's be clear on this. Then let's set aside the platform of the past and the perfection of the, you know, the PC has arrived and therefore its end. But the platform of the future, what are the, who are the players and the components that make that up? And then where do startups then best fit into that platform of the future? Well, there's a stack, and it depends which part of the stack you want to think about. So you work up from the bottom with Arm, and then all the licences around Arm and the people who make chips for Arm.
Starting point is 00:19:31 And then you have Qualcomm and SpreadTrum and Media Tech who are packaging that up so that people who don't know anything about cellular technology or semiconductor design can still create phones. And then you have the whole Shenzhen ecosystem. And it's quite unclear how that's going to play out and whether there will be kind of equivalents of Dell HP Compact and so on, kind of become the kind of the global scale players or not, you know, what the future of Android is very unclear. But then you have kind of the software ecosystem on top, which is Android and iOS. And, you know, in contrast distinction to what we were just saying about scale, the Apple ecosystem has 700 to 750 million active devices at the moment.
Starting point is 00:20:10 And it has two sides of out-store revenue and it has roughly half of web traffic. So it has sufficient scale to attract development. Which is the first time that we have two ecosystems. Yeah, it's the first time we have two winners in effect. And then you have the Apple ecosystem and the Android ecosystem next to each other. And they've created this platform. And then you have, as you go further up the stack, you have then Google creating discovery and Facebook creating social and discovery
Starting point is 00:20:33 and all sorts of other people trying to create other kind of ways of value on top of those. And I think certainly at the startup space, and particularly for enterprise computing or business computing, which is sort of a very understandable innovation space. You know, there's... Because people actually buy things. Well, they buy it and there doesn't appear to be like a magic step of like go to 100 billion user kind of thing. You know, you've got like all of this innovation that you have to do to solve all these business processes and business innovation challenges on top of this infrastructure, whether it's AWS or it's Azure or it's Google Cloud.
Starting point is 00:21:10 They all provide this fundamental scale that you can't do on your own, but that's just going to enable a whole bunch of innovation where having these two stable points of iOS and Android, like, are super helpful to allow this to happen. And that is exactly what happened in the PC error. Like once Windows and Intel sort of stabilized, that itself enabled the web to continue to exist because it gave targets for the browser, targets for graphics drivers and video and all of that to happen. And so we're at this sort of golden age where now if you start a company, the level of uncertainty about like even where to begin is much lower than it was even a year ago.
Starting point is 00:21:47 You have this massive thing to plug into if you can. build the right thing. That thing is not likely to be a PC, perfect though it may be, and a battleship in Benedict's parlance. But it'll be that thing that comes after the smartphone. And I have to say, I'm really excited to see how this plays out and what can possibly top it. Stephen, Benedict, thank you. Thank you.

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