Is Microsoft losing?
#1
Posted 07 October 2011 - 07:16 PM
Most of the people who own a PC own one because of the Internet. But in the last few years The Internet, or how we regard it has changed.
Smartphones, and more recently Tablet computers like the iPad have made Internet something portable, to carry around with us, put on the table, take to the toilet with us.
In the world of the portable OS, there are 2 main camps. Apple and Android. (yes there are others, like Blackberry, but they are no were near as well-known)
In this segment of the market, Microsoft who are almost impossible to avoid when it comes to regular PC's and laptops, are almost invisible.
I only ever used one device with Windows Mobile, and it was a disaster. Slow, cumbersome, difficult to understand.
The future of computer is with these portable devices.
Will Windows be able to keep up?
#2
Posted 07 October 2011 - 07:32 PM
#3
Posted 07 October 2011 - 07:38 PM
From what I have read from the poster who's doing the beta testing on Windows 8, I won't be upgrading at all. I'm perfectly happy with Windows 7.
I don't think I would ever get a Windows 7 phone at all. All though It think my brother Russ had a Windows phone and didn't mind it too much. I know I'll be sticking with the iPhone since this has been the best phone I've had.
#4
Posted 07 October 2011 - 07:44 PM
Not quite the USSR or USA, but relevant and instrumental enough to matter, especially with regards to who they throw their lofty weight behind. (In our tech situation Microsoft tends to be siding with Apple in this new balance of power).
Of course, this period of low-stress not being "an industry leader", if Microsoft is smart, gives them an opportunity to really develop and learn while the big boys battle it out, making them far stronger when the next shift in the balance of power happens.
#5
Posted 07 October 2011 - 08:04 PM
They keep coming out with so many ideas, so many failures (Zune, Windows Phone), that they almost look... desperate.
#6
Posted 07 October 2011 - 08:07 PM
They keep coming out with so many ideas, so many failures (Zune, Windows Phone), that they almost look... desperate.
Sad but true.
I saw a Zune up close and personal a few years ago and I didn't like it at all. Weird interface and it seemed to be a bit more sluggish compared to an iPod.
#7
Posted 07 October 2011 - 08:32 PM
We buy a new PC, and we use Windows 7 because that's what it comes with. It's the default choice, and we are used to it. Like a Big Mac.
#9
Posted 07 October 2011 - 10:00 PM
might be the most succesful though.
#10
Posted 07 October 2011 - 10:09 PM
Apart from the hard drive size, there really isn't any difference between the different price levels of iPhone. They all look the same, they all have the same features and they all work the same.
It's actually a bit boring.
#13
Posted 07 October 2011 - 10:26 PM
The big advantage of Android over Apple is that you have soooo much more choice.
That's one thing I've been a bit frustrated with regarding Apple. For the most part you are restricted to using iTunes. Where as with the Droid Eris (when I had one), you were able to drag and drop music right onto the phone with Windows Explorer. I really wish Apple would be able to have the same interface for the music portion.
#14
Posted 07 October 2011 - 10:32 PM
Overall, as usual, Microsoft has come to late to a major trend. They missed the internet in the 90s and could only temporarily get the lead in the internet consumer sector after the browser wars, which for years damaged the internet formats and standards. Luckily, the success of open source and Firefox put Internet Explorer in its right place, and nowadays hardly anyone but big corporation (who, in my practical experience, are just too blinded and tied into the whole Microsoft machinery to even begin to realise the alternatives) uses it. The server market has never been Microsoft's major domain, they've always shared it with Linux.
Microsoft's big claim is to the desktop, and to the business world through their Office suite, where they have so far been successfully keeping competitors at bay by establishing their own non-standard formats and making it hard for everyone else to be compatible with them. That seems to be their only reliable foundation: A desktop everyone is used to (it's not that Apple and Linux desktops are worse, in many ways the Microsoft desktop is simply antiquated, but people are used to it, and everything that's different scares them before they can see the benefits), and an Office suite many people have to use because they depend on being able to handle the formats. I don't know how likely it is for Microsoft to claim a relevant share of the current smartphone market, but as long as people are tied to MS Office and Exchange, they're quite safe.
That's one thing I've been a bit frustrated with regarding Apple. For the most part you are restricted to using iTunes. Where as with the Droid Eris (when I had one), you were able to drag and drop music right onto the phone with Windows Explorer. I really wish Apple would be able to have the same interface for the music portion.The big advantage of Android over Apple is that you have soooo much more choice.
That would be against everything Apple is striving for. I give them credit for having a way of simplifying the user experience by focusing on things every user can handle. But they've always been doing it at the expense of advanced features, preferring to completely ignore them rather than just putting them where only experienced users would find them, and they've always been focused on tightly controlling their eco system. Only for a brief time did they allow other companies to produce Apple devices, and never (that is, not while they adhere to their current business model) will they allow anyone but themselves to fully access their data and devices. iTunes is a prime example. Basically, they're like Facebook, only with a much more loyal (to put it mildly) fanbase.
#15
Posted 07 October 2011 - 11:00 PM
Also I just don't think the iPhone 4 is a particularly goodlooking device, which is very rare for Apple. (the iPod 3gs was far better looking).
#16
Posted 07 October 2011 - 11:16 PM
Also I just don't think the iPhone 4 is a particularly goodlooking device, which is very rare for Apple. (the iPod 3gs was far better looking).
I'll never understand why the iPhone 4's design is so lauded. I haven't been a big fan of Apple's designs for years, but usually they at least look decent. The iPhone 4 looks like a brick, or like an unrefined prototype.
#18
Posted 08 October 2011 - 12:20 AM
#20
Posted 08 October 2011 - 12:57 AM
#22
Posted 08 October 2011 - 01:03 AM
#24
Posted 08 October 2011 - 01:31 AM
#26
Posted 08 October 2011 - 05:58 AM
The future of computer is with these portable devices.
Not for me...
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