Former Apple exec: Has Microsoft gone nuts?

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  • wa3zrm
    Member
    • May 2009
    • 4436

    Former Apple exec: Has Microsoft gone nuts?

    bgr.com ^ |

    Of all of the dramas currently unfolding in the tech world right now, Microsoft’s is undoubtedly among the most intriguing. Years ago, just before Windows Phone was first released, industry watchers warned that unless Microsoft could make serious strides in the smartphone market, it would undoubtedly be doomed. Then the iPad and Android tablets began eating into PC shipments and analysts warned that unless Microsoft launched an immediate and aggressive attack on the tablet market, it would be steamrolled by Apple and Google. Fast forward to today and Microsoft’s global smartphone market share still sits in the low single digits. Microsoft’s new tablet platform, Windows RT, is all but dead. And yet despite all that, Microsoft is still thriving, having racked up a $5.24 billion net profit on more than $18.5 billion in revenue during its most recent quarter. But the Redmond, Washington-based giant is hardly in the clear.
    Former Apple executive Michael Mace recently penned a piece on Microsoft’s current debacle. We covered some aspects of it earlier this week, but the broader, simpler theme is one that really is becoming an important question that more and more people are starting to ask:
    Has Microsoft gone nuts?
    Mace points to three rumors early on in his piece, and he notes that while they are all just rumors, they come from well-sourced reporters with solid track records.
    1. Nokia was working on an Android phone and Microsoft might not make Nokia kill the project after it takes ownership of Nokia’s devices and services business.
    2. Microsoft is toying with the idea of offering its Windows Phone and Windows RT operating systems to partners for free.
    3. The Start button is already back in Windows 8.1, but the full Start menu may return in a coming update. “Metro” apps, meanwhile, might be removed from the current Start screen, instead functioning in more traditional windows on the desktop.

    “Those are just rumors, of course, but they’re coming from multiple reporters who have strong ties to Microsoft, which means they’re probably genuine plans or at least serious trial balloons,” Mace wrote. “Taken together, the reports give a picture of a company that’s laudably willing to revisit its assumptions, but that also seems to have lost track of what it’s trying to accomplish.”
    There are even a few other gems out there that Mace didn’t cover. Is Microsoft going to give Samsung a $1 billion bribe to keep making Windows Phones (that it doesn’t even bother to promote)? Is Windows Phone 9 going to ditch the “Metro” interface partially or even completely?
    So again, has Microsoft gone nuts?
    Mace goes on to pick apart these specific reports and to offer some offer some unsolicited advice to his former rival, but the biggest takeaway goes back to his main point. Once Microsoft names its new CEO, his or her first and perhaps most important near-term task will be to prove to customers and investors that Microsoft has direction.
    “The challenge for Microsoft’s new CEO is the same one Steve Ballmer has tried and failed to answer for years: Demand for Windows is declining because the platform hasn’t done anything new for a decade, while Microsoft doesn’t control the fast-growing segments in tablets and smartphones,” Mace said. “Microsoft tried to use Windows 8 to take over tablets. That failed. What do you do now?”
    There’s nothing wrong with experimenting, of course, but Microsoft appears to be reversing course on some core moves that were supposed to carry the company forward through the “post PC” era. What’s more, these well-sourced reports suggest that some of the big changes Microsoft is considering might simply make matters worse. Would a free Windows Phone OS really be any more appealing to vendors that have already invested several years and tens of millions of dollars in Android (which also, of course, is already free)? Is paying Samsung $1 billion to keep making uninspired Windows Phones a smart long-term play when Samsung is in the process of launching its own Android rival?
    Microsoft is not in dire straights. Not even close. But the challenges currently facing the company are real and the recent string of rumors noted above suggests that Microsoft still has no idea how it is going to address them.
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  • Darwin
    Member
    • Mar 2010
    • 1372

    #2
    Microsoft can afford to fail repeatedly, and experimentation is good, but the clueless suit who green-lighted the Metro interface should be kicked in the nads on an hourly basis. I went back to the loving arms of the Mac world because of Windows 8 which looks like it was designed by and for pimply adolescents.
    Last edited by Darwin; 23-12-13, 11:17 AM.

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    • Crow
      Member
      • Oct 2010
      • 4312

      #3
      No, but I sure have.............Caw Caw Caw..!!
      Words of Wisdom

      Premium Parrots: only if the carpet matches the drapes.
      Crow: Of course, that's a given.
      Crow: Imagine a jet black 'raven' with a red bush?
      Crow: Hmm... You know, that actually sounds intriguing to me.
      Premium Parrots: sounds like a freak to me
      Premium Parrots: remember DO NOT TURN YOUR BACK ON CROW
      Premium Parrots: not that it would hurt one bit if he nailed you with his little pecker.
      Frosted: lucky twat
      Frosted: Aussie slags
      Frosted: Mind the STDs Crow

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      • Skell18
        Member
        • May 2012
        • 7067

        #4
        The start menu is not a proper start menu!!!!! Its just a button that takes you back to those stupid panels an does the same thing as pressing the windows key on the keyboard! I binned my laptop a few weeks ago as i was truly sick of it all and bought a mac, much nicer and easier to use.

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        • lxskllr
          Member
          • Sep 2007
          • 13435

          #5
          I like the Start Screen, but I don't like Windows, or Apple. I think MS might go the way of IBM. Lose the consumer market, but still be pretty locked into the enterprise.

          Comment

          • trebli
            Member
            • Mar 2010
            • 797

            #6
            Originally posted by Skell18 View Post
            ... and bought a mac, much nicer and easier to use.

            Congratulations! Welcome to the Club. It used to be like a Speakeasy, but it's mainstream now.
            Last edited by trebli; 23-12-13, 06:23 PM.

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            • Premium Parrots
              Super Moderators
              • Feb 2008
              • 9758

              #7
              I have a feeling my next computer will be a Mac....I'm so tired of all the little [and big] problems with the others.
              Grant me the serenity to accept the things I cannot change, the courage to change the things I can, and the wisdom to hide the bodies of the people I killed because they were annoying......





              I've been wrong lots of times.  Lots of times I've thought I was wrong only to find out that I was right in the beginning.


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              • sirloot
                Senior Member
                • Mar 2011
                • 2607

                #8
                Windows seems fine to me .. thats just cause they port very few games to linux and im too lazy to setup an emulator .

                only people who dont know what they are doing really need a start menu .. and i agree the tiles are kinda useless unless you have a touchscreen which isnt the norm for most home users.

                and i don't know who coined the term "Post PC ERA" (i think its bullsh*t) .. even as popular as tabs, phabs and phones have become they still are plenty of workstations, home pc's and extreme gaming pc's out in the market used daily ... just cant beat them yet in terms of raw cpu/gfx power, storage or scalability/customization

                Apple needs to look at itself in the mirror before calling someone else crazy hello iphone 5c ?
                Last edited by sirloot; 23-12-13, 08:09 PM.

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                • Skell18
                  Member
                  • May 2012
                  • 7067

                  #9
                  Originally posted by trebli View Post
                  Congratulations! Welcome to the Club. It used to be like a Speakeasy, but it's mainstream now.
                  Cheers, its not my first mac and almost everything else computerwise I own is apple, ipod, iphone, ipad etc, so it was a given I would go back really lol.

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                  • wa3zrm
                    Member
                    • May 2009
                    • 4436

                    #10
                    http://www.freebsd.org/
                    If you have any problems with my posts or signature


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                    • lxskllr
                      Member
                      • Sep 2007
                      • 13435

                      #11
                      Originally posted by wa3zrm View Post

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                      • trebli
                        Member
                        • Mar 2010
                        • 797

                        #12
                        Originally posted by Premium Parrots View Post
                        I have a feeling my next computer will be a Mac....I'm so tired of all the little [and big] problems with the others.
                        If you do, I don't think you'll regret it.

                        Comment

                        • Skell18
                          Member
                          • May 2012
                          • 7067

                          #13
                          Originally posted by trebli View Post
                          If you do, I don't think you'll regret it.
                          +1!

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                          • CoderGuy
                            Member
                            • Jul 2009
                            • 2679

                            #14
                            I used to be a Mac guy, but then I needed a new laptop and had to weigh my options; 3200 for a decked out 15" or 999 for a decked out 17" gaming laptop. I chose the latter. While I do miss my Mac, it's much cheaper to keep up to date with PCs.

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                            • sirloot
                              Senior Member
                              • Mar 2011
                              • 2607

                              #15
                              Originally posted by CoderGuy View Post
                              I used to be a Mac guy, but then I needed a new laptop and had to weigh my options; 3200 for a decked out 15" or 999 for a decked out 17" gaming laptop. I chose the latter. While I do miss my Mac, it's much cheaper to keep up to date with PCs.
                              eggzacklee and if yer pc breaks and yer handy enuff you can repair it yourself with off the shelf parts

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