Δευτέρα 14 Οκτωβρίου 2013

--> As Microsoft Updates Mobile Software, a Cautionary Tale !

 
 
REDMOND, Wash. — If Microsoft has learned anything while competing against Google in the Internet search business, it’s that Google clings to a dominant position like a squatter does a house.

The lesson is a relevant one for Microsoft’s mobile phone business. Microsoft is discovering that gains in market share for its phones are incremental, slowly acquired and ultimately dwarfed by Google’s position. 
 
Just as in search, Microsoft steadily rolls out nice improvements to its mobile products, the latest batch of which are being announced Monday. At least in the past, though, these refinements have not created a swell of people who find them compelling enough to choose Microsoft over Google’s Android system.

The update Microsoft is announcing Monday to its mobile operating system — its third to Windows Phone 8 — isn’t a drastic set of changes. There is support for quad core processors that can give more oomph to applications, support for higher resolutions on big-screen mobile phones and a new driving mode that limits notifications people receive when they’re behind the wheel.
 
 
 
 
 
The new update to the Windows Phone supports a higher screen resolution on big screens, allowing for more tiles to be visible.

The updates, Microsoft said, are one example of how the company is constantly chipping away at the reasons people have for buying iPhones and Google’s Android phones instead of Windows Phones. Microsoft has long been trying to fill holes in the app library for Windows Phone. The company is also buying Nokia’s handset business to strengthen its mobile products.

“We’ve seen our sales rate improving and improving,” Joe Belfiore, the Microsoft corporate vice president in charge of the design of Windows Phone, said in an interview last week.

But Windows Phone is still a very small part of the market. Its global share of smartphone shipments is expected to be 3.9 percent this year, said IDC, the research firm. Its share in the United States, where Apple and Samsung reign supreme, is expected to be even weaker at 2.8 percent, IDC said.

Microsoft is doing better in emerging markets where Nokia, which accounts for the vast majority of Windows Phones sold, is an established brand and where the smartphone business is at an earlier stage of development, said Kevin Restivo, an analyst at IDC.

In Mexico, for instance, Windows Phone is in second place, ahead of Apple but far behind Android phones. Microsoft is also eating share from a much-weakened BlackBerry.

But Microsoft’s slow progress in search offers a cautionary tale for its mobile efforts. Microsoft’s search engine, Bing, has steadily gained share in recent years to account for nearly 18 percent of searches in the United States, according to comScore.

It has accomplished the gains partly by stealing share from Yahoo, for which Bing has powered searches since 2010. The combined share of Bing and Yahoo has changed little in the last few years.

Google, meanwhile, increased its search share slightly, to 66.9 percent during that period, according to comScore. And the discrepancy means money. Microsoft had nearly $1.3 billion in operating losses in online services during its last fiscal year, while Google made more than $11.6 billion in net profit during that same time.

Can Microsoft do better in mobile?

At a recent meeting of Microsoft investors, Steven A. Ballmer, the company’s outgoing chief executive, stated the obvious, but in starker terms than he ordinarily does. “Mobile devices — we have almost no share,” he said.

He didn’t let the statement hang in the air for very long before adding, “But I’m an optimistic guy. Any time we have low market share sounds like upside opportunity to me.” 
 
Source: nytimes.com

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