Comments on: Microsoft aims to be cell phone 'Survivor'
Tech giant hopes to outwit, outplay and outlast its opponents with impending release of Windows Mobile 5.
Tech giant hopes to outwit, outplay and outlast its opponents with impending release of Windows Mobile 5.
December 2, 2009 5:21 PM PST
December 2, 2009 4:37 PM PST
December 2, 2009 4:14 PM PST
Add headlines from CNET News to your homepage or feedreader.
More feeds available in our RSS feed index.
Related quotes
aren't theirs.
I just hope that there will still be providers of cell phones which are
actually cell phones, not kilobit toys trying to be gigabyte devices.
The fact is that Microsoft's mobile division has lost millions of dollars for (at least) the past three consecutive years, including $224 million this past year (see: http://www.microsoft.com/msft/earnings/FY04/earn_rel_q4_04.mspx). This alone should weigh heavily as evidence of it's deliberate intent to participate in anticompetitive behavior. After all, WHO ELSE in this segment can afford to lose $224 million in one year? Certainly not the marketshare leader - Symbian. Probably not PalmOne, or Nokia!
What is particularly upsetting is that the press' behavior is just about as bad as Microsoft's. Note that this article mentions Microsoft's REVENUE in the segment, but COMPLETELY SKIPS OVER the fact that it has lost HUNDREDS OF MILLIONS in it's pursuit of the segment. This is EXACTLY THE SAME as what happened when Microsoft was pursuing Netscape, and various others! The "news" sounds more like a Microsoft PRESS RELEASE than a statement of fact (and PROBABLY because that is where it came from!)
I don't know about everyone else, but I would really appreciate it if we could just get straight, honest, news from "news sites" instead of "will Longhorn run on your machine", "can Microsoft kick Google's butt", press releases.
In short Palm made their bed back in 2001. I remember at CES when there was a PDA roundtable and Palm's CEO of the year announced that users don?t want sound/color/high res screens/etc. They just care about Palm's ease of use and the whole Palm Zen thing. Palm did this to themselves.
In hindsight I think I know why they said what they said. They?ve been drifting on the coattails of the original Palm OS way back when they first bought it. Updating it, refining it, but never reinventing it. I think the horrible truth is upon us. Palm is incapable of releasing a real update. All they seem to be capable of doing is bolting on crap to a completely obsolete and out of date OS.
One thing that I want to make perfectly clear..I'm no lover of MS's business practices and how they develop their software. I?ve ranted many a time over the Pocket PC and its lackadaisical forward momentum that is only a couple steps ahead of Palm. The difference being that MS out of the box with Pocket PC (I try to forget that whole Palm Sized PC nightmare thing.) they had the core architecture ready to go. Just like Apple and OS X, Pocket PC 2000 had potential but was really rough around the edges. By PPC 2005 that will be debuting this summer the edges are buffed, polished, and ready to go. You can fault MS for many a thing but you can't fault them for Palm committed Hari-kari.
Symbian suffers from two major problems:
1. It is a "commitee" product defined by competitors (=slow process full of compromises and politics)
2. It only offers C++ which makes it much less useful for enterprise (in-house) applicatons than Microsoft's .NET. The Java (J2ME) add-on is a seriously crippled system, not in any way comparable to .NET.
Oh, really? Palm isn't capable? Well, Mr. Rundgren, for the record, I'm on my fifth Palm phone. And I have apps on the fifth phone (a Treo 600) that came on the first phone.
Also for the record, my FIRST handheld, which was prior to my first Palm phone, was a Casio "Casseopia", which ran Windows CE (2.0). It wasn't capable of running 1.0 apps, or any version after 2.0. NOTHING worked well on it. And Microsoft has revised the OS 15 times since then! And EACH revision is incompatible with the others! And you're going to tell us that Microsoft is the only one capable of setting standards? HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA!
[Edited by: admin on May 6, 2005 3:06 PM]
NO soliciting or business promotions allowed on CNET TalkBack.
- Put simply...
- by May 6, 2005 11:33 AM PDT
- Put simply, if a company is losing 200 million a year on a product (such as Windows Mobile), the company is OBVIOUSLY selling BELOW HIS OWN COST. That is clearly anticompetitive. Especially, if the company is one that has already been tried repeatedly, on multiple continents, for anticompetitive behavior!
- Like this Reply to this comment
-
-
- Troll?
- by May 9, 2005 3:48 AM PDT
- The article says that last year they made $80million. Can you back it up when you say the company is losing $20million a year or is just the usual troll crap that is taking over the internet.
- Like this View reply
Processing -
(15 Comments)