![]() |
Microsoft to Shed Up To 7,800 Jobs, Mostly in Phone Business - Printable Version +- MacResource (https://forums.macresource.com) +-- Forum: My Category (https://forums.macresource.com/forumdisplay.php?fid=1) +--- Forum: Tips and Deals (https://forums.macresource.com/forumdisplay.php?fid=3) +--- Thread: Microsoft to Shed Up To 7,800 Jobs, Mostly in Phone Business (/showthread.php?tid=180939) |
Re: Microsoft to Shed Up To 7,800 Jobs, Mostly in Phone Business - silvarios - 07-09-2015 vicrock wrote: The first Windows Mobile devices with phone functionality date back to the early 2000s. Similarly, Samsung, another common target for the copying Apple crowd, had both MP3 phones and smart phones back when Apple was just releasing the iPod. If anything Apple has been consistently behind the curve when it comes to hitting markets. Doesn't mean Apple hasn't brought innovation or had good devices, but they haven't been first for years. Re: Microsoft to Shed Up To 7,800 Jobs, Mostly in Phone Business - silvarios - 07-09-2015 D. Lawson wrote: Yeah, Windows Phone is pretty decent. I don't necessarily care if the platform continues, but I want some options Re: Microsoft to Shed Up To 7,800 Jobs, Mostly in Phone Business - silvarios - 07-09-2015 MGS_forgot_password wrote: I thought Nokia was doing pretty well in network communications, no? Been a while since I checked their financials, but things looked better in many ways after the phone business spinoff. Re: Microsoft to Shed Up To 7,800 Jobs, Mostly in Phone Business - Speedy - 07-09-2015 silvarios wrote: The first Windows Mobile devices with phone functionality date back to the early 2000s. Similarly, Samsung, another common target for the copying Apple crowd, had both MP3 phones and smart phones back when Apple was just releasing the iPod. If anything Apple has been consistently behind the curve when it comes to hitting markets. Doesn't mean Apple hasn't brought innovation or had good devices, but they haven't been first for years. Never first, just better. Re: Microsoft to Shed Up To 7,800 Jobs, Mostly in Phone Business - silvarios - 07-09-2015 Speedy wrote: The first Windows Mobile devices with phone functionality date back to the early 2000s. Similarly, Samsung, another common target for the copying Apple crowd, had both MP3 phones and smart phones back when Apple was just releasing the iPod. If anything Apple has been consistently behind the curve when it comes to hitting markets. Doesn't mean Apple hasn't brought innovation or had good devices, but they haven't been first for years. Never first, just better. Sure, that's a perfectly valid narrative to debate. As you note, while Apple may offer an arguably better device/service, it still doesn't explain how someone copy Apple when they were already in the market before Apple? Are Rhapsody and Spotify copying Apple with Apple Music? Honestly, I think Microsoft was in a better place in mobile when they worked hard to make partnerships with the phone manufacturers themselves and not when the tried to directly compete by buying Sidekick, destroying Sidekick, releasing the Kin (a featurephone at smartphone prices that was likely no better than the Sidekick and had far less brand recognition), and then buying Nokia's phone division. As a pretty heavy user of Nokia phones, I never made the conversion to Windows Phone. Largely because I was absolutely livid about the N9 being DOA, and not available in the USA to boot, and then later as a protest against software patent extortion. However, as all that slips into the history books, I do find Windows Phone to be an interesting platform. One that would do better with some more partners. Re: Microsoft to Shed Up To 7,800 Jobs, Mostly in Phone Business - D. Lawson - 07-10-2015 silvarios wrote: The Kin was actually based on Windows CE, but wasn't a true smartphone by any means (and had no user-installable apps), and the initial decision to require a data plan for all of the "social" stuff was a disastrous choice. They later revamped the OS to remove all of the "social" stuff and make it more of a feature phone with Wi-Fi (keeping the browser and mail client, which were more robust than anything you find on a BREW-based feature phone even to this day), something which should have been done out of the gate. It was, of course, too little and too late, but I have a soft spot for the thing (the revamped "m" version, at least) just the same. You are correct that both Kin models were considerably more crippled than the most recent Sidekick models preceding them. Re: Microsoft to Shed Up To 7,800 Jobs, Mostly in Phone Business - silvarios - 07-10-2015 D. Lawson wrote: The Kin was actually based on Windows CE, but wasn't a true smartphone by any means (and had no user-installable apps), and the initial decision to require a data plan for all of the "social" stuff was a disastrous choice. They later revamped the OS to remove all of the "social" stuff and make it more of a feature phone with Wi-Fi (keeping the browser and mail client, which were more robust than anything you find on a BREW-based feature phone even to this day), something which should have been done out of the gate. It was, of course, too little and too late, but I have a soft spot for the thing (the revamped "m" version, at least) just the same. You are correct that both Kin models were considerably more crippled than the most recent Sidekick models preceding them. Great info. Thanks. |