Why Microsoft is positioned beyond the mobile curve

Why-Fi

gnap
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lengthy but great read. i know this board loves to jeer at MS but nadellas vision will become standard mark my word

the huge separation between ios and osx is the prime example of an ecosystem set up that is speeding towards being outdated by the day...


http://www.windowscentral.com/microsoft-positioned-beyond-curve-apple-google

i already know what most of you will say, likely without even reading so heres how the article starts
Microsoft's ahead of the curve in mobile! That sounds crazy, I know. Especially considering Microsoft has only 2.7% share of the smartphone space. Apple has over six times that with about 17%. And market leader Android has nearly 30 times Microsoft's share with about 80% of the market.

now that thats out the way
Still, Microsoft is ahead of the curve in mobile, and I'm going to tell you why.

"… one big mistake we made… was to think of the PC as the hub for everything for all time... And today… the high volume device is the six-inch phone… But to think that that's what the future is for all time…would be to make the same mistake we made in the past… that would be madness."–Satya Nadella

Apple bites
On September 9th, 2015, onlookers were shocked into silence as the presenter at Apple's "Hey Siri" event called Microsoft onstage to demonstrate Office on Apple's new Surface competitor, the Ipad Pro. The presenter affirmed Microsoft's dominant position in productivity by preceding Kirk Koenigbauer's appearance onstage with,

"....who knows better about productivity than Microsoft?"

The fact that a touch-friendly version of Office was demonstrated on Apple's new mobile device instead of Apples own productivity suite makes the very clear statement that Microsoft knows mobile productivity. Remember this.

Microsoft, the soul of the machine
A clergyman would ask, "What is a body without a soul?" A techy would ask, "What is hardware without software?" Each would answer that both are empty shells with no internal force to direct the external form. What's on the outside indeed matters.

But as Momma always said, "It's what's on the inside that counts."

It is telling that on September 9th, the most valuable company on earth, known for its exquisitely designed and sought after hardware, brought Microsoft onstage to imbue life into its newest tablet. Redmond demonstrated how mobile productivity would work on Apple's new productivity positioned iPad. A device strikingly similar in form factor and accessory design to Microsoft's Surface mind you.

Yes, a device made in Microsoft's Surface's image, also had life breathed into it by Microsoft's productivity software. This demonstration was a humble concession by Cupertino.

Microsoft's move to be the mobile ecosystem with which users interact, regardless of the platform a user's device was designed for doesn't end with Office. The following are just some of the cross-platform Microsoft apps serving millions of users.

  • Wunderlist
  • Accompli (Outlook)
  • Datazen
  • Sunrise
  • Lync
  • Office Lens
  • Skype
  • Office Sway
  • OneDrive
  • Remote Desktop
  • MSN Apps
  • Groove Music
  • Bing
  • MS Health
  • Cortana
Around the bend
If we consider our computing habits one thing is clear. The future of mobile computing is "device-less." Not in the sense that we won't continue using devices. But in that there is a paradigm shift underway where personal computing is no longer dependent on the devices we carry or use at home and work. As we begin tasks on one device and complete them on another, we are beginning to embrace the reality that much of our personal computing is happening beyond the bounds of any device we possess.

This shift is occurring naturally. The company that has a pervasive presence across all platforms including its own, and supports hardware and software that seamlessly transitions with a user's cloud-based computing needs, will be positioned ahead of the curve. Microsoft's that company.

Microsoft is forging a foundation for tomorrow's computing experience. They were behind the curve when the smartphone became the primary computing device. Their pioneering of a path to computing beyond the phone proves that there has been a lesson learned.

Microsoft's Clouds got it covered
Microsoft is serious about the cloud.

"80% of Fortune 500 companies are on Microsoft Cloud. 40% of Azure revenue comes from startups and independent software vendors. And Microsoft has a goal of $20 billion in cloud revenue by 2018."

Of the three major players in the cloud (Amazon, Google) Microsoft's is the fastest growing. And just as natural clouds are an indiscriminate covering, Microsoft Cloud supports all platforms.

Windows everywhere
We are Windows, from Raspberry Pi to HoloLens… HoloLens… it's part of my mobility strategy. When the person was using Autodesk and Maya on the desktop and just moved to a 3D model and interacted, they weren't using their phone.–Nadella

Windows 10 is the only platform that uses the same OS core across all form factors. This provision enables a universal app platform where an app can be written once and with minor tweaking fit all devices.

The introduction of the Windows 10 Companion App to tie iOS and Android users closer to the Windows ecosystem further extends Microsoft's mobile reach.

Look who's talking
Cortana, Microsoft's Bing backed AI is now available on Windows 10. "She's" the only digital assistant available on PC. "Her" transition to Android, including deep integration with Cyanogen, and coming move to iOS will make "her" the only digital assistant available on virtually all major platforms.

"Her" integration in Microsoft's Edge browser along with her deep integration in Windows naturally gives those all in with Microsoft a fuller "Cortana" experience.

Jason WardDocs.com
Take note. Cortana, for Microsoft, is much bigger than reminding you to get toilet paper when you leave work. Cortana Analytics is big business. Using machine learning, perceptual intelligence, and the cloud, Cortana is crunching data to help businesses and healthcare make data-driven personalized decisions.

We'll manage
…I want to be able to be present on every mobile endpoint…It's not (just) the notion of having our application endpoints, Skype, Outlook, Wunderlist, Sunrise, on every one of the two billion devices. We want to have Microsoft experiences…that's a platform play... Guess what is behind those applications? It's One Cloud. It's Office 365, either for the consumer or for the enterprise. There's…Microsoft Account in there.–Nadella

Jason WardDocs.com
Microsoft's goal is to go beyond an app presence on all mobile devices. Redmond wants to be the force managing those devices. Via Microsoft Intune Microsoft is equipped to manage any device on any platform in the enterprise environment. Thus, Microsoft becomes the mobile device management platform while also powering productivity on those devices. That's a comprehensive mobile power play.

…it's very important to think of our operating system more broadly than some old definition of an operating system. So we want to be in every device…I want the identity management. It's not MSA alone, it's Azure Active Directory. It is managing those devices, securing those devices in terms of data protection. These are all core capabilities that we have."–Nadella

Out of the box
An exciting Windows 10 feature is the ability to stream games from the Xbox to other Windows devices. With Windows 10, gaming takes a front seat across the entire Windows ecosystem.

From PC to Hololens, gaming is out of the box.

Mobile devices like laptops, tablets and 2-in-1's will certainly benefit from Microsoft's renewed focus on gaming. Just imagine how future high-powered Windows 10 "phones" will fit within this gaming paradigm.

On the Surface
The Surface was designed to inspire OEMs to create hybrid devices that take advantage of Microsoft's Continuum empowered OS. Microsoft's innovation was so revolutionary that it was mocked initially. Ironically rivals like Apple and Google now recognize the industries shift toward a single device paradigm.

Apple's iPad Pro and Google's Pixel C reflect these firms acknowledgment of the value of hardware that shifts to fit a user's need. Though these devices are clearly mimicking the Surface's successful hardware design, there's a problem.

While rivals were mocking Microsoft's Surface and their single OS ambitions, Redmond was steadily perfecting that universal platform that would power the form shifting hardware.

So though both Apple and Google now provide Surface-like hardware, neither iOS or Android are part of a universal platform. Apple and Google cannot provide the seamless transition of a user's computing experience as comprehensively (work and personal) as Windows does.

Hololens and Microsoft Band
Like everything else Microsoft, both Hololens and Microsoft Band will run Windows 10. Both also use Microsoft technology that is available to OEM partners. Partner OEMs can license the Band's sensor technology OEMs, for instance, thus extending Microsoft's presence in the wearable's sector. Additionally, Windows Holographic is part of Windows 10. It is Nadella's expectation that OEMs will be inspired to build Hololens-type wearable computers in the future.

Of course, the band and Hololens fit seamlessly into Microsoft's Windows environment.

"That's why I like to think about Windows 10 as not being bound to any one form factor."-Nadella

Jason WardDocs.com

"In my case I have a Band. I have my phone. I have my Surface. I have my Surface Hub and I'll have a HoloLens. And that to me is all Windows 10. And I'll seamlessly move between all of these. I want the notifications to flow between all of these. I want my data and apps to flow between all of these things."- Nadella

Beyond the smartphone
"… we have to be on the hunt for what's the next bend in the curve. That's what… anyone has to do to be relevant in the future… We're doing that with our innovation in Windows. We're doing that with features like Continuum. Even the phone, I just don't want to build another phone, a copycat phone operating system, even."

Nadella recognizes that what we currently identify as a smartphone, that 5"-7" personal computer, may not be our primary computing device in the future. As mobile devices replaced the PC it would be naïve to think smartphones will persist as our primary "computer" indefinitely. As I shared in the opening, that shift is already happening.

It is becoming clearer that the primary computing "device" is the cloud. Where a user's experiences exist in a formless, device-less state.

This transition is where Microsoft has made its play. Through cross-platform apps, a single OS, a universal app and gaming platform, a ubiquitous cloud, a device management platform and Continuum Microsoft is positioned for the "device-less" future.

Microsoft will provide its own first-party, context sensitive hardware. These devices will be in the premiere position (more than Apple and Google) to take full advantage of the company's investment in the cloud as a platform.

Nadella has promised that Microsoft experiences will be best on Microsoft devices. If Redmond delivers on a Surface and OneNote type experience more broadly across its family of devices, its Continuum enabled "phones" will certainly be positioned beyond the curve.

Finally, the word "phone" no longer adequately defines the devices we carry. As such, I believe Microsoft will begin (and may have begun) abandoning the word "smartphone" when referring to its devices. Windows "phones" will transcend the current idea of a smartphone due to their position to optimally benefit from the universal Windows platform, the Microsoft Cloud platform, and Continuum.

"That's why whenever I talk about Windows 10, I talk about mobility broadly across all of those devices. For sure there is a form factor today which is the below six or seven inches, which is powered by a very specific operating system instance of Windows 10, which is Windows Mobile. But what do you call that (device) when you use Continuum, and then you're using applications on a big screen with a mouse and keyboard? It's Windows 10."

Yes, it is clear that Apple and Google, with their "Surface-like" devices, recognize now what Microsoft recognized years ago. Users computing needs are transient and exist beyond the device. But form-shifting hardware without the universal, device management and cloud platforms to support it do not position those companies for the "device-less" future. This time, Microsoft is positioned beyond the curve. And the competition, rather than mocking is mimicking, is no longer laughing.
 

rapbeats

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everything in the article i told my wife like 6 months to a year ago. i said you see what these fools at MS are doing? They are saying you know what. forget this war between devices. how's about we make everything approachable/crossplatform. like EVERYTHING. and it works via the cloud, from office to other things.

MS is getting into everything you own one way or another. if the pc dies, ms stays alive in your iphone, ipad, mac even, doesnt matter. they have the brains and the head start to pull it off since they are the gurus of software. there is no catching them by apple or some other name brand company. so instead of fighting it and keeping everything locked down to PC only, or separating mobile from pc, from tablets, etc. they said open the gates to everyone and everything. the manner in which you can develop an app for a windows phone, that will also look great on a tablet(but not exactly how it does on the phone), and look similar but different on a pc/mac over the internet. is a beautiful thing. when you're only programming said app once for one device technically. it will be programmed for you, for those other devices seamlessly. and i dont develop apps....YET.

yall better get with MS, they aint playin over here.
 

Why-Fi

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if this stuff interests you check out some writings by joshua meyrowitz. some shyt written in 1985 and his ideas are finally being realized
 

rapbeats

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i'll throw another one at yall. what MS is doing in addition to their cross platform move. is, leveraging all of their skill sets. Most times companies with this many different things going would be good at each thing. but wouldnt have the foresight to merge them when need be.

for example.
office 365. is office in the cloud linked to one drive.

but those who use excel(which every business on earth does to some degree). actually has all sorts of ADD ins, to help you pull off all sorts of tricks and what not without knowing VBA programming. well they have even simplified some of that. they started making something called excel power query, power view, power map, power pivot.

those things worked great. but they were separate add ins you had to hook up separately to excel. they are updating things so quickly now. they have merged all of those into one product called POWER BI.

But they were smart enough not to think they could outdo their own excel. it aint happening. to entrenched in businesses/corporations. so they just put that on as an addition to it. it works even better than all of the separate power this and that.

they said something not long ago about how they are learning our habits using say window 10, and companies/users constantly sending them bugs, or just things they would like to see that they like in other software. if they find it feasible. they will patch it in within a few months or less. it used to take years for some of these updates. you would have to wait for the next iteration of say office or windows. or if its a really bad bug. you would have to wait until everyone and their mama cried about it for a year and change straight .THEN they would fix it, and put it out. like a year later. that cloud and how they gather our info and how we use things is getting these fixes/updates out in record time.

MS is literally on their super saiyan right now


They are using the functionality of BING's search engine. Or your computer. but not just that. within office apps(excel, word, etc).
say for instance you are looking for specific data sets like say (what degrees in 2015 have produced the most $$$ per person in the US). you dont have to go to bing, or google and type that in. you go inside excel or access and use their search feature, its already linked to bing searches. so they already have that within the apps. you find what you're looking for and the stuff is right there. when you find new things they havent caught, it logs that too. that comes from how your PC used to index everything on your hard drive i think starting with windows XP(which everyone use to hate because it slowed your computer down a lot at times). but it no longer slows your system down. thats leveraging different abilities of a company and merging them when it makes since.
 
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StatUS

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Continuum is a huge feature from MS. Every app workable on multiple devices from phones to consoles to pcs.
 

Liquid

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Microsoft is ahead of everyone.

I've been telling people time and time again.

Dedicated apps? :scusthov:

Apps are just going to be wrappers pulling data to do all the heavy lifting.

The Coli is already on the wave with a responsive design and a service like pushbullet :blessed:

Remember the tapatalk days @cook and @Brooklynzson ? :huhldup:
 

itsyoung!!

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Microsoft is ahead of everyone.

I've been telling people time and time again.

Dedicated apps? :scusthov:

Apps are just going to be wrappers pulling data to do all the heavy lifting.

The Coli is already on the wave with a responsive design and a service like pushbullet :blessed:

Remember the tapatalk days @cook and @Brooklynzson ? :huhldup:

I paid for tapatalk to post here on my phone :snoop:






I was doing some googles and found out Microsoft had $92 billion in off shore account last year :dead: these mafukkas so rich they just be hiding billions all over the place :dead:

I think they'll be fine :heh:

$92 billion in actual money, no liquid :wow: in an account no one even knew about til last year :russ: thats not even they US funds :russ:
 

iceberg_is_on_fire

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Based MS. I copped that new Office and I rock with their stuff on my Android devices.

Microsoft, you da real MVP.
you-the-real-mvp-o.gif
 

Fatboi1

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That's nice.
Now can someone tell me how can I take advantage of this shift?

I use windows 10 and I have an android phone. I rarely use office apps and pretty much I just use windows mail for basic stuff. I don't care much about these superficial stuff like Cortana etc.

I'm not interested in a surface or laptops.
 
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Why-Fi

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That's nice.
Now can someone tell me how can I take advantage of this shift?

I use windows 10 and I have an android phone. I rarely use office apps and pretty much I just use windows mail for basic stuff. I don't care much about these superficial stuff like Cortana etc.

I'm not interested in a surface or laptops.
you can take advantage of it by using outlook for more than basic stuff, using office more, and caring more about superficial stuff like cortana etc

you could always get a chromebook and use all google stuff
 
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