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Microsoft Exec Responds To the Google-Motorola Deal

adeelarshad82 writes "In a statement released yesterday, Microsoft's Windows Phone Division President Andy Lees said 'Investing in a broad and truly open mobile ecosystem is important for the industry and consumers alike, and Windows Phone is now the only platform that does so with equal opportunity for all partners.' What's interesting is that even though some analysts are actually expecting OEMs to switch their focus to Windows Phone 7, past sales figures (especially for Samsung) show that the decision to do so might not come easily."

210 of 293 comments (clear)

  1. Analyst can chime all they wish. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I mean, android is what 47% of smartphones, and Microsoft Windows 7 around 2%.

    Keep on wishing bitches!

    1. Re:Analyst can chime all they wish. by Nerdfest · · Score: 2

      I think they're hoping their latest round of patent abuse will push a manufacturer or two their way. Based on how Microsoft's previous 'partners' have fared, it will need to be a little stronger push.

    2. Re:Analyst can chime all they wish. by UnknowingFool · · Score: 3, Informative

      No all of Windows mobile is 2% which includes WM6. While MS may have sold more WP7 phones this year, it isn't matching the growth of Android and iPhone. Without looking at the split between WM6 and WP7, I would guess that many users of WM6 are not migrating to WP7 as WM6 users were mostly business while WP7 is mostly consumer.

      --
      Well, there's spam egg sausage and spam, that's not got much spam in it.
    3. Re:Analyst can chime all they wish. by geoffrobinson · · Score: 2

      I don't expect Android to give much ground, but the reason for Android's growth is obvious. Cell phone companies needed something to compete with the iPhone and the Android OS was free. If they end up lagging behind Motorolla due to their special access, they may latch onto another OS.

      I don't envision it happening but crazier things have happened.

      --
      Except for ending slavery, the Nazis, communism, & securing American independence, war has never solved anything.
    4. Re:Analyst can chime all they wish. by morcego · · Score: 2

      Most Android smartphones are cheap "smartphones" that can barely powerful enough to do the things you'd expect a smartphone to do. Android has the market cornered on junk phones. Also keep in mind that, with iPads and iPod touches counted, iOS greatly surpasses Android in total market share, and the iPhone is the top-selling smartphone as well as the most profitable.

      Also keep in mind that, with bicycles and oranges counted, Android greatly surpasses iPhone.

      It is totally possible the iPhone is the most profitable, but can you back your other claims somehow ? It being the top-selling and most android phones being "barely powerful enough to do the things you'd expect a smartphone to do" ?

      Until you back that somehow, all you did is make a faith based statement. Is Apple still a religion these days ?

      --
      morcego
    5. Re:Analyst can chime all they wish. by s73v3r · · Score: 1

      No, you're seeming to make excuses. While his flamebait about android not being powerful is laughably stupidly false, deciding not to count iPads and iPod Touches into iOS marketshare figures is pretty stupid. Just like deciding not to count Android tablets in Android sales figures.

    6. Re:Analyst can chime all they wish. by dwlovell · · Score: 2

      Incorrect, all of Windows smartphones is around 9-10%, it is projected that the WP7 portion is around 2%.

      From July 28th, 2011, showing all Windows Mobile + WP7 = 9% of smartphone market share
      http://www.engadget.com/2011/07/28/nielsen-android-leads-us-smartphone-market-with-39-percent-shar/

      From March 2011 showing all Windows Mobile + WP7 = 10% of smartphone market share
      http://www.engadget.com/2011/03/03/visualized-us-smartphone-market-share-by-manufacturer-and-plat/

    7. Re:Analyst can chime all they wish. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      My Microsoft phone (WP7) has not had any of the "epic fails" in software, that you mentioned. Mind you, I've only had it since may. Still, my android had already crashed twice, and run into software glitches that required restarts in the same timeframe, so... I'd have to say, please remove your head from your rectum.

      It's got more to do with who made the phone and how good they are with the platform, than the OS, both OSs are quire reliable in the right hands, and lousy in the wrong.

    8. Re:Analyst can chime all they wish. by RyuuzakiTetsuya · · Score: 1

      Just like deciding not to count Android tablets in Android sales figures.

      What? I thought those fell into, "margin of error."

      --
      Non impediti ratione cogitationus.
    9. Re:Analyst can chime all they wish. by MobileTatsu-NJG · · Score: 1

      In all fairness, Apple was going to turn up in this thread anyway. You lot cant' resist.

      --

      "I like to lick butts!" by MobileTatsu-NJG (#32700246) (Score:5, Informative)

    10. Re:Analyst can chime all they wish. by Dishevel · · Score: 1

      Evo 4G, Evo Shift, Evo 3D, Droids, G2, Nexus S, and many other smart phones that do not have crappy hardware.

      You can like iOS if you want.
      You don't have to be a dick about everything that is not iOS to do it though.

      --
      Why is it so hard to only have politicians for a few years, then have them go away?
    11. Re:Analyst can chime all they wish. by UnknowingFool · · Score: 1

      I was referring to worldwide figures. Interestingly Samsung appears to have shipped more Bada smartphones than all WP7 phones combined. Shipped doesn't mean sold but it is an interesting stat.

      --
      Well, there's spam egg sausage and spam, that's not got much spam in it.
    12. Re:Analyst can chime all they wish. by morcego · · Score: 1

      Just like deciding not to count Android tablets in Android sales figures.

      Which they shouldn't be. We are talking about phone here. Tablets are not phones. Actually, Android's (as of right now) has a separated version for tablets (yes, I know some creepy ones run on 2.3, but the real Android for table is 3.x).

      If you are comparing phones, it should be only iPhone vs Android Smartphones.

      If you are comparing platform-wide devices, what is to stop someone to counting all Linux devices ? After all, Android runs on a modified Linux kernel.

      Lets keep it within the same category, and compare oranges to oranges, please.

      --
      morcego
    13. Re:Analyst can chime all they wish. by kurt555gs · · Score: 2

      I wish I had mod points for the parent! Also, Microsoft now controls Nokia, so the statement they made about Googorola is incorrect.

      --
      * Carthago Delenda Est *
    14. Re:Analyst can chime all they wish. by Osgeld · · Score: 1

      yes cause nothing can change

    15. Re:Analyst can chime all they wish. by jmauro · · Score: 1

      iPads and iPod touches use iOS, but they are not smartphones. Including them into the marketshare of smartphones makes no sense.

    16. Re:Analyst can chime all they wish. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      The HTC Thunderbolt has a 1ghz processor, and 768 MB of RAM. The IPHONE has a 1Ghz processor and 512MB of RAM. You fail to qualify your loose lipped, apple ass smacking comments with any substantial evidence to your baseless claims.

    17. Re:Analyst can chime all they wish. by CastrTroy · · Score: 1

      This argument always comes up when talking about smart phones. My Nokia C5 may be low powered by iPhone or HTC Desire standards, but still does just about everything I want out of a smart phone. I can send and receive email, browse the web, listen to music, watch videos, download podcasts, play some simple games, use GPS navigation, use a touch interface. It run Symbian, which isn't even mentioned in most talks about smartphones, but as far as I'm concerned it works great. I could pay $400 for a phone, but I feel like that's stepping into the realm of diminishing returns. Why pay more than twice as much for something that only provides 10% better functionality.

      --

      Anthropic principle: We see the universe the way it is because if it were different we would not be here to see it.
    18. Re:Analyst can chime all they wish. by BlackSnake112 · · Score: 1

      I thought there was a rumor that Apple was making an iOS for the IMacs and Powerbooks? I am not sure about the power mac (the tower desktop). That way all software for those devices would come through the apple app store.

    19. Re:Analyst can chime all they wish. by daem0n1x · · Score: 1

      So what? Do I need a € 700 gizmo to make phone calls, manage my calendar/contacts, read emails and play games? Fuck no. A Chinese smart phone is good enough for me and 99% of the buddies out there.

    20. Re:Analyst can chime all they wish. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      And since its just current generation, 2% is just laughable. Google has done remarkable job with Android and we should praise them for it. Seriously, if it wasn't for Google all we had was iPhone or Windows Phone.

      Whore for Google much? Ever heard of Nokia? Blackberry? HP?

    21. Re:Analyst can chime all they wish. by s73v3r · · Score: 1

      And why wouldn't counting iOS devices against Android devices not be doing just that? The more important metric would be how many devices could run an app written for that system.

    22. Re:Analyst can chime all they wish. by kwark · · Score: 1

      So where are the ads on Android phones specifically? Sure I seen them in de browser sometimes (like in another browser/platform without adblocker). Sure I see them in apps (like any other platform with apps), but nothing specific for android.

    23. Re:Analyst can chime all they wish. by losfromla · · Score: 1

      oh yeah? so?

      --
      Only I can judge you.
    24. Re:Analyst can chime all they wish. by HiThere · · Score: 1

      Except that now that Google has purchased Motorola Mobility (for patents?), Motorola may no longer have "special access".

      --

      I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
    25. Re:Analyst can chime all they wish. by s73v3r · · Score: 1

      It does when the point is to figure out how many devices your app can run on.

    26. Re:Analyst can chime all they wish. by davester666 · · Score: 2

      How exactly is WP7 'equal' for all partners when they have already promised better access to Nokia for adding/changing the OS?

      And does everybody get a large cash payment for signing up for WP7 like Nokia did?

      --
      Sleep your way to a whiter smile...date a dentist!
    27. Re:Analyst can chime all they wish. by Patch86 · · Score: 1

      And any "analysts" who predict Samsung are suddenly going to abandon Android because of this deal are clearly living in a fantasy land. Samsung have invested far too heavily in Android (both phones and tablets) to simply toss it away, without at least some evidence of market unfairness from Google/Motorola first. It's not exactly the same as Nokia abandoning their single (never as popular as they'd wanted) MeeGo handset.

    28. Re:Analyst can chime all they wish. by PyroMosh · · Score: 1

      Count me among them. I'm still running WM6.5

      I picked up an HTC Tilt 2 (AT&T branded Touch Pro 2) at the end of 2009.

      At the time, the G-1 had been out for a year, but it was STILL either the only Android phone on the market, or nearly so. Android was not the sure thing it is today. It took a frustratingly long time to get additional handsets on the market.

      I chose the phone I did because it had great hardware. But beyond that, it was a process of elimination.

      iOS was out of the question because it's a walled garden. I can't side-load apps, Apple controls everything, to say nothing of the fact that I like having a keyboard.

      Blackberry is not, nor has it ever been a serious contender for a smartphone OS ecosystem. It's more like a Playstation of a Tivo than a PC. A useful appliance hat's not seriously expandable enough to be useful.

      Symbian: never came close to getting enough market share for consideration.

      Windows Mobile: Tons of legacy apps, can sideload, can develop and deploy apps myself because the whole system is as open as I will ever need it to be. Perfect.

      Android. Just as open as Windows Mobile (more so) but new. Not satisfied it will go anywhere.

      Congrats, Microsoft. The only reason I had to NOT go Android is gone because of time. The only reason I would have stayed with Windows on my phone is gone too. You broke all compatability with all legacy apps. You removed the ability to sideload. Why would I want an iPhone without the marketshare?

      My next phone will be Android. I just need to wait for my contract to be up with AT&T because they don't have any decent QWERTY android phones.

    29. Re:Analyst can chime all they wish. by hesaigo999ca · · Score: 1

      Yes, and with them now owning motorola, they will be able to push android on ALL the phones...motorola being a very good brand of cell phones....this deal is just a sweetest deal from google!

  2. Up is down, down is up, cats and dogs agree. by ThisIsSaei · · Score: 2, Insightful

    And Microsoft is lecturing the tech world about being open and free with software. I'm pretty sure that's one of the signs of apocalypse.

    1. Re:Up is down, down is up, cats and dogs agree. by fuzzyfuzzyfungus · · Score: 1

      Actually, for specific definitions of "open" that is a longstanding Microsoft tradition:

      Microsoft does, in fact, enthusiastically endorse the right of as many hardware vendors as possible to license Microsoft operating systems and certain other platform technologies(unless that doesn't work out, like 'Playsforsure', in which case dump their sorry asses and leave the 3rd parties to rot). They also endorse the right of as many software developers as possible to develop software that depends on win32, .NET, or other Microsoft technologies.

      They take these principles of freedom and openness quite seriously...(except when they don't work out).

    2. Re:Up is down, down is up, cats and dogs agree. by ThisIsSaei · · Score: 1

      I was just being comical. (Well, trying.)

    3. Re:Up is down, down is up, cats and dogs agree. by bonch · · Score: 1

      Based on how they've been behaving the last couple of years, I think Google could use the lecture, actually.

    4. Re:Up is down, down is up, cats and dogs agree. by s73v3r · · Score: 1

      Once I can see the source of WP7, can compile it myself, and create a ROM for loading onto my phone, then maybe I'll consider it "Open and Free". Until then, it's another locked down system. Which, if I was going to use one, there's nothing compelling about WP7 over the iPhone anyway.

    5. Re:Up is down, down is up, cats and dogs agree. by Reapman · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Yeah ok..
      Google: Honeycomb's release is delayed, please wait for Ice Cream. However until then our PHONE OS you can poke around in.
      MS: You want our Source Code? Are you SERIOUS?
      Apple: You want our Source Code? Are you SERIOUS?

      Yup, your right, Google is by far the least open of the 3 *rolls eyes*

    6. Re:Up is down, down is up, cats and dogs agree. by PoopCat · · Score: 1

      Re: your sig. Your premise is flawed, therefore your question is meaningless.

    7. Re:Up is down, down is up, cats and dogs agree. by oakgrove · · Score: 1

      Did you eat too much lead based paint as a child? I'm not trying to be funny, I'm legitimately concerned.

      --
      The soylentnews experiment has been a dismal failure.
    8. Re:Up is down, down is up, cats and dogs agree. by Pope · · Score: 1

      He did, but it was all open source lead paint.

      --
      It doesn't mean much now, it's built for the future.
    9. Re:Up is down, down is up, cats and dogs agree. by scot4875 · · Score: 1

      If Google is open source

      This isn't even a valid phrase. Google is a corporation. Corporations are not made out of source code. Google uses open source projects for a lot of things, and has open source projects that they host. That doesn't mean that every line of code in use on their servers or that make up their applications should automatically be up for grabs.

      Also, you're a blatant Apple fanboy, so somehow I doubt you apply this same criticism to them. *Nothing* Apple does outside of Webkit is open source anymore. You can't get the source to apple.com any more than you can get the source to google.com. If you actually cared at all about open source, Google is by far the more attractive option. You don't, though, you just like to be contrarian and feign ignorance as some sort of an 'argument.'

      --Jeremy

      --
      Jesus was a liberal
    10. Re:Up is down, down is up, cats and dogs agree. by Alex+Belits · · Score: 1

      *Nothing* Apple does outside of Webkit is open source anymore.

      CUPS is.

      --
      Contrary to the popular belief, there indeed is no God.
    11. Re:Up is down, down is up, cats and dogs agree. by moorster · · Score: 1

      Correct me if I'm wrong, but Andy never said anything about "open source." He said the platform was "open". How do you get "open source" from the word "open"? Neither Google or Microsoft make any of their core stuff open source. They both have quite a few libraries and projects that are licenced under various open source licences, but that is the exception not the rule. I don't understand why that confuses people.

    12. Re:Up is down, down is up, cats and dogs agree. by moorster · · Score: 1

      They are all completely closed, even Google. There is no difference. Just because Google pays lip service to open source by using other people's products doesn't mean they care a lick about the community. Google is not your friend.

    13. Re:Up is down, down is up, cats and dogs agree. by moorster · · Score: 1

      No his signature is correct. There seems to be a perception that Google is somehow an "open-source corporation." That's just not true. Google is no more open source than Oracle/Sun. Sure, they're happy to ride on the backs of other people's effort, but they contribute very little to the community. At lease MS has the guts to make their own programming languages, IDE, database, web server, cloud system, dektop and mobile OS and game console instead of stealing these products from open source projects.

    14. Re:Up is down, down is up, cats and dogs agree. by s73v3r · · Score: 1

      That's one of the core components of "Open". If he's going to say his platform is more "Open" than Android, then he's gonna have to back it up.

      I'm not confused in the least. Except when it comes to saying that you're more "open" than an open source system.

    15. Re:Up is down, down is up, cats and dogs agree. by PoopCat · · Score: 1

      Despite what you might think, perception != reality. The reality is, Google does publish some of their code as open source, but that does not make them open source themselves.

  3. Everyone gets same deal as Nokia? by hawguy · · Score: 5, Insightful

    So when Microsoft says this:

    Windows Phone is now the only platform that does so with equal opportunity for all partners.'

    Does that mean that everyone gets billions of dollars from MS?

    http://thenextweb.com/microsoft/2011/04/21/nokia-and-microsoft-deal-official-definitive-agreement-signed/

    As a result of the deal, Nokia will pay Microsoft royalties for the Windows Phone platform, starting only when the Finnish company launches its first Windows Phone devices. Microsoft has also agreed to make payments to Nokia “measured in the billions of dollars” for services but also intellectual property royalties.

    Or are we supposed to believe that MS would have paid for Nokia's IP even if Nokia hadn't switched to Windows Phone?

    1. Re:Everyone gets same deal as Nokia? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      What is your point? Nokia is their most valuable partner. That doesn't mean that Microsoft isn't supporting all of the hardware makers. Since partnering with Nokia they have also added ZTE, Fujitsu, and others. Clearly Nokia is their #1 partner, but Microsoft doesn't own them and Microsoft is not promoting Nokia as "the" WP7 to get. The internet is promoting Nokia as the WP7 phone to get, but so far Microsoft hasn't even show off a Nokia phone while has demoed new phones from Samsung, Fujitsu, etc...

      Also WP7 is not in a spec war like Android so WP7 could end up being cheaper to make than Samsung. With Android it seems every 2 months a phone comes out with a better CPU, more RAM, etc.. where with WP7 it is more like the iPhone and apparently Microsoft is happy to refresh specs once or maybe twice a year. That should save hardware makers money because they can use the same guts and just pump out new phones with different body styles, cameras, etc...
       

    2. Re:Everyone gets same deal as Nokia? by nevillethedevil · · Score: 1, Troll

      Does that mean that everyone gets billions of dollars from MS?

      No it means everyone gets equally raped.

      --
      Be gone from my sight or prepare to feel my flaming wraith!
    3. Re:Everyone gets same deal as Nokia? by hawguy · · Score: 2

      What is your point? Nokia is their most valuable partner. That doesn't mean that Microsoft isn't supporting all of the hardware makers. Since partnering with Nokia they have also added ZTE, Fujitsu, and others. Clearly Nokia is their #1 partner, but Microsoft doesn't own them and Microsoft is not promoting Nokia as "the" WP7 to get. The internet is promoting Nokia as the WP7 phone to get, but so far Microsoft hasn't even show off a Nokia phone while has demoed new phones from Samsung, Fujitsu, etc...

      My point is that on the one hand, MS is claiming that they are the only vendor-neutral mobile phone software maker, but on the other hand, they are throwing billions of dollars at "their most valuable partner".

      That hardly sounds vendor neutral unless they do the same for every partner. Google has no reason to give special treatment to their new motorola division at the expense of their other hardware partners - they profit from getting more Android handsets out in the market, they aren't going to make a bundle of money from hardware sales.

    4. Re:Everyone gets same deal as Nokia? by DickBreath · · Score: 1

      For some of us, Android phones pushing the hardware boundaries, causing new more powerful phones to come out every couple months is a good thing.

      Microsoft wants a monopoly on a closed source phone operating system. I'm sure the phone OEM's have learned from watching Microsoft rake in the billions while PC OEMs live on razor thin margins. I'm sure the phone OEMs are just thrilled at the prospect of handing Microsoft a new monopoly. Thrilled I tell you.

      The reason Android is winning is because it is open source. You can download it and build it.

      The only form of control Google has is it's Android Market. As for app stores, Amazon has its own app store. Best Buy is rumored to be working on one. Nobody is stopping anyone from building more app stores.

      My point about open vs closed and monopoly is that if Google went away, Android would continue. If Microsoft went away, or just had a whim to stop investing in WP7, then WP7 would cease. The value in Android is the momentum it has in developers, applications, OEMs and mobile network operators even if Google suddenly stopped investing in Android.

      Android is not perfect. Far from it. But openness it the winning characteristic.

      --

      I'll see your senator, and I'll raise you two judges.
    5. Re:Everyone gets same deal as Nokia? by JDG1980 · · Score: 2

      Razor-thin margins on PC hardware may be bad for OEMs, but they are good for consumers. And after seeing all the crap that both OEMs and phone carriers load up their systems with, I don't really have much sympathy for them.

    6. Re:Everyone gets same deal as Nokia? by wiedzmin · · Score: 1

      Except that MS is not anymore in position to rape anyone. They are facing obsolescence within decade unless they actually succeed with their win8/wp7 plan.

      Assuming you are referring exclusively to the mobile platform, because last time I checked Microsoft still owns consumer and enterprise PC markets?

      --
      Bow before me, for I am root.
    7. Re:Everyone gets same deal as Nokia? by recoiledsnake · · Score: 1

      So when Microsoft says this:

      Windows Phone is now the only platform that does so with equal opportunity for all partners.'

      Does that mean that everyone gets billions of dollars from MS?

      http://thenextweb.com/microsoft/2011/04/21/nokia-and-microsoft-deal-official-definitive-agreement-signed/

      As a result of the deal, Nokia will pay Microsoft royalties for the Windows Phone platform, starting only when the Finnish company launches its first Windows Phone devices. Microsoft has also agreed to make payments to Nokia “measured in the billions of dollars” for services but also intellectual property royalties.

      Or are we supposed to believe that MS would have paid for Nokia's IP even if Nokia hadn't switched to Windows Phone?

      From the article:

      The deal will focus on four areas, including the porting of Nokia’s mapping, navigation and location services to the Windows Phone operating system, with Microsoft ensuring its Bing search engine is present on Nokia devices. Combined, the companies hope that it will enable “better monetization of Nokia’s navigation assets” and bring in “new forms of advertising revenue”.

      Bing is weak on local and mapping in EU and Asia, so this deal involves that. If another OEM brings something in value to them, I am sure they may pay up.

      --
      This space for rent.
    8. Re:Everyone gets same deal as Nokia? by DragonWriter · · Score: 3, Insightful

      What is your point? Nokia is their most valuable partner. That doesn't mean that Microsoft isn't supporting all of the hardware makers.

      It does, however, mean that Microsoft's claim that, with Google acquiring Motorola Mobility, Windows Phone is the only remaining mobile platform where all hardware vendors are treated equally is false, or at least if it is true it is true only in the Animal Farm sense of "all vendors are treated equally, but some are treated more equally than others".

      Since partnering with Nokia they have also added ZTE, Fujitsu, and others.

      And Android is still owned by the Open Handset Alliance, which includes more device makers than just Motorola, more software vendors than just Google, and a bunch of wireless carriers, component manufacturers, and other firms in markets where Google doesn't play and isn't buying anyone at the moment.

    9. Re:Everyone gets same deal as Nokia? by Penguinisto · · Score: 1

      Question is, for how long will they have that iron grip on the consumer side? Windows has already dropped below 90% marketshare, and is likely far lower than that once you remove the corporate/business boxen from the equation. They've been trending downwards for quite awhile now, and that downward trend has been slowly gaining velocity.

      To add salt to the wound, consider the tablets. Forget iOS vs. Android, count 'em all, and you notice that few if any of them selling in volume have windows on them. You'll also notice that the growth curve for them is staggering, and that the numbers will soon be (if they're not already) substantial enough to start taking some really large bites out of the typical laptop/desktop market. So what? Well, those are consumers/users/seats/licenses that aren't Windows-by-default-based laptops or PCs. While tablets aren't desktops or even laptops, they are computing devices that fulfill most (if not all) of the needs of the typical Joe Consumer who is buying it.

      If I were Ballmer, I'd be scared shitless. Sure, he's got the EA and SA money coming in by the tanker-full. OTOH, the consumer side of things is, IMHO, rapidly slipping from his grasp. We can already see some reaction from Microsoft in the form of the whole Windows 8 initiative (though honestly I think it'll shape up to be another WinFS), and the whole Nokia buy-off thing, not to mention all the software patent hanky-panky we've seen in the past couple years. But... in spite of all that, Microsoft is still losing the consumer.

      I mean, sure, you can say that the remaining grip on the enterprise will keep Microsoft from becoming obsolete, but then again, Sun Microsystems once had that too, no?

      --
      Quo usque tandem abutere, Nimbus, patientia nostra?
    10. Re:Everyone gets same deal as Nokia? by LWATCDR · · Score: 1

      One does wonder. Samsung is a huge cell phone makers and their Galaxy line is a huge seller. They brought into the WP7 and it flopped. Don't say wait for Mango because I heard, wait for WM6.5 and I heard wait for WP7! HTC was a HUGE WM developer. The best Windows Mobile phone made was the HD2 which really didn't do all that well until HTC put Android on the same basic phone and called it the Supersonic/Evo.
      So these two pioneers are playing second fiddle to Nokia?
      So lets see Microsoft has failed to produce a competitive phone OS for four years now and they have adopted a favored OEM in Nokia.
      vs
      Google has given them a smash hit OS but has a phone making arm that they say will be independent.
      A bird in the hand. I am sure that HTC and Samsung will still make WP7 phones just as they do now. They will still make as many Android phones as they can sell as well. The only question is which one will sell more?
       

      --
      See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
    11. Re:Everyone gets same deal as Nokia? by Metal_Militia · · Score: 1

      if Google went away, Android would continue.

      Hahah no it wouldn't. Nobody else is providing any code to android. Nobody else is even allowed. All the default apps (like gmail, market, maps, the browser) are closed source.

      The browser is 100% open (but i suppose you haven't even seen the AOSP sources, let alone analyze the code for the browser) For the other apps, you're right, they're absolutely closed. But if Google went away, what could you do with a client for their now-offline services? :-)

    12. Re:Everyone gets same deal as Nokia? by tlhIngan · · Score: 1

      For the other apps, you're right, they're absolutely closed. But if Google went away, what could you do with a client for their now-offline services? :-)

      Well, the primary place to get apps is the Marketplace, which is controlled by Google. Sure, you can use alternative ones, but their selection is relatively poor compared to the Market.

      It's why Android devices without the "with Google" stuff tend to be fairly awful - most authors don't bother putting their stuff up for sideloading or alternate marketplaces. If Google goes away, you'll have a bunch of abandoned apps (never to be re-posted), and everyone else will scramble around and suddenly you need to be a member of 5 or 6 marketplaces to get apps.

    13. Re:Everyone gets same deal as Nokia? by oakgrove · · Score: 1

      So then you agree that for whatever reason, Nokia is getting special treatment and for the MS exec quoted on the article to pretend otherwise is a pine black lie.

      --
      The soylentnews experiment has been a dismal failure.
    14. Re:Everyone gets same deal as Nokia? by Rockoon · · Score: 1

      Did you even read what he wrote?

      If anything what he wrote suggests that Microsoft, and not Nokia, is getting special treatment.

      Nokia's mapping software ported to WP7.
      Bing on Nokia phones.
      Nokia pays Microsoft royalties for WP7.
      Microsoft gets a license to use Nokia's IP.

      Nokia isn't getting special treatment. Microsoft is.

      --
      "His name was James Damore."
    15. Re:Everyone gets same deal as Nokia? by oakgrove · · Score: 1

      Did you even read the press release when Ms and Nokia announced the whole thing? you know, the part where they said they would share engineering resources and Nokia would drive windows phone forward? and the part where Microsoft paid Nokia billions? but, hey, don't reality get in the wayof your fantasy. I meanits not like your rockoon account isn't used for the express purpose of shilling for Ms. *wink*

      --
      The soylentnews experiment has been a dismal failure.
    16. Re:Everyone gets same deal as Nokia? by kurt555gs · · Score: 2

      Don't kid yourself, Microsoft controls every move Nokia makes, without paying for them. It was the largest corporate robbery in history. See if you can get an N9? We wouldn't want the public to see Maemo with QT screen objects on a Smart Phone would we.

      Nokia is Microsoft's bitch. More even than Motorola will be after Google pays for them.

      --
      * Carthago Delenda Est *
    17. Re:Everyone gets same deal as Nokia? by Rockoon · · Score: 1

      I meanits not like your rockoon account isn't used for the express purpose of shilling for Ms. *wink*

      Paranoia is a thought process believed to be heavily influenced by anxiety or fear, often to the point of irrationality and delusion. Paranoid thinking typically includes persecutory beliefs concerning a perceived threat towards oneself.

      --
      "His name was James Damore."
    18. Re:Everyone gets same deal as Nokia? by oakgrove · · Score: 1

      Sure. Oh, that's right, I just went back through your recent posting history. You're a shill. Attempting to obfuscate the fact doesn't change it.

      --
      The soylentnews experiment has been a dismal failure.
    19. Re:Everyone gets same deal as Nokia? by wiedzmin · · Score: 1

      Theoretical pitfalls can be argued for just about any company/product out there - Android will die from all the malware attacking it, Apple is going to run out of things to "reinvent", BlackBerry is going to bore consumers to death... but at the end of the day they are all speculations - all it takes is one spectacular product and entire consumer base shifts towards your brand. Success of the iPhone and its religious spillout into the tablet market is a very good indication of how this could happen; and just because a company hasn't done anything like that in the past - doesn't mean it couldn't happen in the future. All speculation, until you see a bankruptcy filing.

      --
      Bow before me, for I am root.
    20. Re:Everyone gets same deal as Nokia? by Rockoon · · Score: 1

      FACT: You called me a shill before looking at my posting history.
      FACT: You claim that later on, after calling me a shill, that you finally looked at my posting history and claim that you were right all along.

      In other words... you are a text-book paranoid schitzo. You think that anyone that says anything contrary to what you believe must be part of an organized effort to discredit those beliefs.. even though you admittedly pick beliefs first and then collect data later.

      I work for the largest employer in... Connecticut. Completely unaffiliated with whatever conspiracy you are imaging in that desperate and irrational mind of yours.

      --
      "His name was James Damore."
    21. Re:Everyone gets same deal as Nokia? by oakgrove · · Score: 1

      You sound like a raving lunatic. Please seek help.

      --
      The soylentnews experiment has been a dismal failure.
    22. Re:Everyone gets same deal as Nokia? by etrusco · · Score: 1

      Doh. Everything needs an equilibrium; maybe if MS didn't force them to have that low margins they wouldn't have to push that bunch of crap on us.
      Razor-thin margins on software would be a good thing for consumers, too. But since MS is a monopoly we can't have it, right? And it's not like Windows doesn't come bundled with a bunch of useless crap.

    23. Re:Everyone gets same deal as Nokia? by moorster · · Score: 1

      That's right, everyone's a shill. Now let's all go back to our rooms and calm down.

    24. Re:Everyone gets same deal as Nokia? by moorster · · Score: 1

      Have you ever actually tried to use that "smash hit" Android OS? It's a terrible user experience. It's stuffed with all kinds of ugly, buggy, crashing apps. There is no consistency and no style. It's just a jumble of haced together code with no sense of design. I dropped my DroidX in one week and now I'm a happy WP7 user.

    25. Re:Everyone gets same deal as Nokia? by mysidia · · Score: 1

      Does that mean that everyone gets billions of dollars from MS?

      No.... it does so with equal opportunity to all partners. The amount of opportunity is near zero, but at least they're equal right?.

      I think a crack might be beginning to form along the fabric of reality.... Microsoft just calling their closed source Mobile platform more "Open" than Google's open source Android platform?

    26. Re:Everyone gets same deal as Nokia? by oakgrove · · Score: 1

      Thou doth protest too much

      --
      The soylentnews experiment has been a dismal failure.
    27. Re:Everyone gets same deal as Nokia? by Penguinisto · · Score: 1

      Err, I'm pointing to actual overall trends, and you're pointing to theoreticals and minor aspects.

      Android having occasional malware is a minor aspect at absolute best, and your postulation of Apple's future capacity to innovate or not isn't slowing down the massive wave of growth they've been experiencing over the past decade. RIM will probably die off anyway, though more likely due to massive organizational problems and lack of even basic features in the product... not because the product will 'bore' consumers.

      Meanwhile, Microsoft's marketshare drop is demonstrable, and factual. There is nothing to indicate that it is being reversed, or that it will reverse within the foreseeable next couple of years.

      --
      Quo usque tandem abutere, Nimbus, patientia nostra?
    28. Re:Everyone gets same deal as Nokia? by LWATCDR · · Score: 1

      Yep I am using the EVO 4G and it works great. Love the phone. Before that I used the Samsung moment. My wife has a WebOS phone and I do IOS development.
      Hey there are websites dedicated to fans of the AMC Pacer. One happy user does not success make.
      And as the the design? Really I have used a WP7 and I found the interface rather bland but the phone was snappy.
      Things like the turn by turn navigation I use all the time it works well and is free.
      I use Google tracks for my hikes.
      I use the Google Voice intergeneration as well. Love the transcribed voice mails.
      The intergeneration for Google+ is very good as are the Facebook and The twitter app I use.
      Oh and I can multitask any apps I want and do tethering.
      I have heard that the DroidX had lots of issues but then the Samsung WP7 phones where selfbricking during one of the software update pushes. The DroidX used the Blur skin which I hear is very bad. Stock Android and HTC sense are both much better IMHO.

      --
      See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
    29. Re:Everyone gets same deal as Nokia? by Rockoon · · Score: 1

      FACT: Mr Paranoid here who I am replying to called many people (I stopped counting at 6) shills this week. Its right there in his comment history.

      --
      "His name was James Damore."
  4. I'll bet they have an opinion by stevegee58 · · Score: 1

    Funny how MS always puts an openness spin on all their activities.

    1. Re:I'll bet they have an opinion by BeShaMo · · Score: 1

      If they can delude the word enough, they will have won (or they'll think they have won).

    2. Re:I'll bet they have an opinion by gstoddart · · Score: 1

      If they can delude the word enough, they will have won (or they'll think they have won).

      Hmmm ...

      Dilute the Word?
      Delude the World?
      Dilute the World?
      Denude the World?
      Denude the Women?

      Definitely can't be "delude the word" ... that doesn't parse.

      --
      Lost at C:>. Found at C.
    3. Re:I'll bet they have an opinion by Ruzty · · Score: 2

      The word you're looking for is "dilute", the act of dilution. Words can't think so it would be difficult to "delude" them as I don't think they can have delusions.

      --
      The Master (Angelo Rossitto) in Mad Max Beyond Thunderdome, "Not shit, energy!"
    4. Re:I'll bet they have an opinion by Anomalyst · · Score: 1

      IANAEM (I am not an English major) I hazard a guess that words cant be deluded because they were never luded in the first place.

      --
      There is no right to feel safe thru security vaudeville at the expense of everyone's freedom, privacy and tax money.
    5. Re:I'll bet they have an opinion by DragonWriter · · Score: 1

      If they can delude the word enough,

      I don't know if you mean "dilute the word" or "delude the world". I suppose either works.

    6. Re:I'll bet they have an opinion by Ruzty · · Score: 1

      I've heard some pretty lewd words in my time. Most of them were flowing from the mouths of military comrades.
      /rimshot

      --
      The Master (Angelo Rossitto) in Mad Max Beyond Thunderdome, "Not shit, energy!"
    7. Re:I'll bet they have an opinion by moorster · · Score: 1

      I think you are talking about Google here, the wolf in sheep's clothing.

  5. Equal Opportunity by nschubach · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I love how it's assumed that somehow the acquisition of Moto will make Android less open to the Android alliance members... I guess that's the normal tactic. Spread FUD.

    --
    Every time I start to have faith in humanity, I ruin it by driving to work between 7 and 8 am.
    1. Re:Equal Opportunity by jjetson · · Score: 1

      And you are assuming it won't. Does anyone outside of Google and maybe Moto execs know the exact implications? Nope. So we have to wait and see. Until then there will be people on either side of the fence because there are indicators that it could be either way.

    2. Re:Equal Opportunity by Superken7 · · Score: 1

      Yes, they spread FUD. Also, how is somehow the acquisition of Motorola giving other manufacturers less opportunities, given that MS is now so close no Nokia? My hypocrisy detector is beeping.

    3. Re:Equal Opportunity by steelfood · · Score: 1

      Equal opportunity for Microsoft just means when they shaft their partners over (which they've done time and again), they shaft everyone over equally.

      The smart executive has a contingency plan in place. The not-so-smart executive dives head-first into the bullsh--I mean koolaid.

      --
      "If a nation expects to be ignorant and free in a state of civilization, it expects what never was and never will be."
    4. Re:Equal Opportunity by MozeeToby · · Score: 1

      In this case, Google's own actions caused the FUD. No one outside of Google knows for sure what their long term plans are and while I personally think the primary reason for the acquisition was for the patent portfolio, it isn't impossible that they are planning on starting a major hardware division of their own which could spell all kinds of problems for other Android manufacturers. In fact, I'd say that just about any other major company wouldn't be able to resist the temptation to throw their new weight around, so it's pretty impressive that there's a bit of fear, uncertainty, and doubt rather than enough of it to send everyone else running for the hills.

    5. Re:Equal Opportunity by morcego · · Score: 1

      What difference would it make even if it did ? I mean, all android versions that come from the manufactures suck in one way or another (bloatware, bad parameters etc).

      In any case, now we know the next Nexus phone will be from Motorola.

      --
      morcego
    6. Re:Equal Opportunity by s73v3r · · Score: 1

      I think Google realizes this, and so will avoid that situation. They might let Moto make one of the upcoming Nexus phones, but that's about it.

    7. Re:Equal Opportunity by NatasRevol · · Score: 1

      I'd be willing to be that the execs at Samsung & HTC are eyeing the hills and seeing what's the best path to get there.

      And if Google, just wanted patents instead of the hardware too, there were other options:
      http://dealbook.nytimes.com/2011/08/15/google-turning-into-a-mobile-phone-company-no-it-says/?nl=business&emc=dlbka8

      --
      There are two types of people in the world: Those who crave closure
    8. Re:Equal Opportunity by bberens · · Score: 1

      I personally think Google has been disappointed with what the hardware manufacturers have done to their software platform. Also, this puts them in a position to protect the other Android OEMs. Google can just as easily use their new power for good or evil. Frankly I don't think Google is stupid enough to cannibalize their partners. It could wind up making them more receptive since they'll be eating their own dog food on the manufacturing front.

      --
      Check out my lame java blog at www.javachopshop.com
    9. Re:Equal Opportunity by ceoyoyo · · Score: 1

      Google doesn't exactly make their up to the minute Git repository public. It wouldn't be particularly surprising if new versions of Android were to appear on Google/Motorola devices first, or if Google devices got to manufacturing just a little faster than others because Google knew what specs were about to be announced.

      Google has a bit of a conflict of interest now.

    10. Re:Equal Opportunity by Americano · · Score: 1

      So they spent 12 billion dollars to basically *shut down* a major Android handset manufacturer?

    11. Re:Equal Opportunity by Americano · · Score: 1

      Probably not in the long run.

      If your WP7 / Android phones are always lagging the Nokia / Motorola offerings, you won't sell many. Ask Nokia how the low-end, low-margin, high-volume commodity handset market worked out for them in terms of sustainable profits. (Not very well.)

      I think you're looking - a couple years down the road - at a market full of hardware/software stacks, with a single company/pairing making the vast majority of "premiere" handsets for that software stack: Google+Motorola = Android; Microsoft+Nokia = WP7; Apple = iOS; HP = WebOS; RIM = BBOS; This means companies like HTC and Samsung may still exist as phone manufacturers, but they will not be major players in the space - they'll have a few "me too" knockoffs, and/or be focusing on the low-end feature phone market as a "hobby" alongside their other lines of business.

    12. Re:Equal Opportunity by elashish14 · · Score: 1

      If you think about it, it's obvious that this is great for all OEMs...

      http://www.google.com/press/motorola/quotes/

      MS must be shitting bricks right now, cause they realize that they have to compete by making a legitimately good product rather than fighting with stupid lawsuits. OEMs know this and they are jumping for joy that they might now be able to kill the troll.

      --
      I have left slashdot and am now on Soylent News. FUCK YOU DICE.
    13. Re:Equal Opportunity by oakgrove · · Score: 1

      You have a flawed premise. I'll let you figure out which one it is.

      --
      The soylentnews experiment has been a dismal failure.
    14. Re:Equal Opportunity by Alef · · Score: 1

      FUD or not, making yourself a competitor to your own customers is generally a very dangerous move to make, for any business. I'd say much of the success of Android has been possible because none of the device manufacturers have had to depend on one of their competitors for software (unlike for example Symbian). Google has been a neutral party, something they no longer will be. I'm a bit unsure as to what the strategy is here. To get under the Motorola patent umbrella, perhaps?

    15. Re:Equal Opportunity by s73v3r · · Score: 1

      Where the hell did you get "Shut Down" from? I was talking about the extent to which Google might take over Moto Mobility.

  6. Given how in bed MS and noikia are by Sir_Sri · · Score: 2

    Given how in bed MS and nokia are, I can't see the 3rd party manufacturers all that happy. This now means that the lead, and pure platform for Android will probably be a motorolo product, and google didn't just spend 12 billion dollars to only make prototypes. The Nexus one, nexus S and presumably now Nexus M will follow with the Nexus M2 or whatever.

    The MS nokia hookup is equally troublesome. Not that MS can't afford to lose what it has put into Nokia, but as Nokia continues to falter until there's a big new WP7 push it may fall to MS to open the wallet and keep them afloat. That puts other manufacturers in a bind. They don't want to put out something NokiaSoft* is going to obsolete in a heartbeat, and they don't want to find that Nokia sinks and MS abandons the WP7 platform.

    *I'm referring to the sub $1000 phone market. The > $1000/phone market is a whole other ball game. I doubt anyone else is going to jump headlong into the 20k/unit smartphone market the way nokia had been, but who knows.

    1. Re:Given how in bed MS and noikia are by mldi · · Score: 1

      and google didn't just spend 12 billion dollars to only make prototypes.

      No, they spent $12billion for mobile patents as well as patents regarding STBs and modems, among other things. They've insisted pretty hard they are letting MM do what they do without any interference, and they're not giving them special consideration for their Nexus line over anybody else. I know, that last part is lip service, but I guess we'll find out. But really it's most about patents. They're thinking ahead for GoogleTV protection as well.

      As far as M$ goes... well... breaking everyone's legs is equal treatment too. Just sayin'.

      --
      If you aren't suspicious of your government's actions, you aren't doing your job as a responsible citizen.
    2. Re:Given how in bed MS and noikia are by i_b_don · · Score: 1

      Patents were important, but I think they were not the core issue. Peopel here on Slashdot get too hyped up about patents. Yes they're important, but they are no where near as important as actually being successful in the market place. Motorola adds a much needed hardware component to the google lineup. They have kicked ass with Android, but their aspirations are more to move into the tablet and TV markets and to do that they need successful hardware. It's been pretty obvious that they have had issues with the partnering approach and having a large mature and skilled partner like Motorola pulls the pieces together. As long as their managers and engineers can get everyone in sync, this will be a powerhouse combination.

      But again, the goal is selling stuff people want to buy. Patents are not the do-all and end-all.

      d

      --
      all language nazi's will burne in heil!
    3. Re:Given how in bed MS and noikia are by J0nne · · Score: 1

      There are phones that cost more than a $1000? I've never heard of such a thing, excluding those gimmicky luxury phones that have diamonds laid into them and have some fashionable brand on them.

    4. Re:Given how in bed MS and noikia are by RyuuzakiTetsuya · · Score: 1

      iridium satellite phones count?

      --
      Non impediti ratione cogitationus.
    5. Re:Given how in bed MS and noikia are by ksr · · Score: 1

      There are phones that cost more than a $1000?

      Behold: The Instrument

    6. Re:Given how in bed MS and noikia are by Sir_Sri · · Score: 1

      That's why I put in the caveat. Dual sim, special numbers you can call for a call centre that will help you avoid people who make less than 500k/year, work anywhere in the world, some diamonds, some gold, every feature under the sun. That sort of thing is not the typical market, and I don't imagine any of the other phone makers are going to get into that market. There are people who will buy an iPhone, diamond encrust it for you, and sell it to you for a ludicrous amount of money, but that's different from the actual manufacturer of the device doing it.

    7. Re:Given how in bed MS and noikia are by i_b_don · · Score: 1

      It is *extremely* rare that patents prevent someone from entering the marketplace. You hear about it, but it never happens. Why? Because patents verdicts are used primary as a means to negotiate a settlement. If the patent holder can get a judge to say that they can restrict someone from entering the marketplace then they can get more money to force the violator to license the patent. It's purely leverage. In the end, the patent holder *wants* the other party to go to market with a very successful product so they can make a killing of licensing fees. It's simple, the only way anyone gets any money in this is if people go to market with successful products. If nobody has a successful product, NO ONE makes any money. Not the patent trolls, not the engineers, not the CEO's, not the workers.

      The only way you make money is to have a successful product. You need that before you need any defense against patents. If you don't have a successful product, you don't need patent protection! As a company, that is your primary goal. If you are making a successful product and making money, you can always pay people to go away (i.e. license patents).

      d

      --
      all language nazi's will burne in heil!
    8. Re:Given how in bed MS and noikia are by mldi · · Score: 1

      Google bought Motorola mobility not motorola solutions which is a whole other company so I don't think they're getting all those patents you're talking about.

      Yes they did. All those are included in Mobility.

      --
      If you aren't suspicious of your government's actions, you aren't doing your job as a responsible citizen.
  7. Like Microsoft cares by GodfatherofSoul · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Once they ran Palm into the dirt, they basically ignored Windows Mobile developers. Now that new competitors have arisen, they act like they care about the mobile segment. You can't poop on developers and expect them to put any faith in your platform again.

    That and Windows Mobile sucks as a mobile or embedded platform. My cable box is WM based and it sucks too!

    --
    I swear to God...I swear to God! That is NOT how you treat your human!
    1. Re:Like Microsoft cares by RyuuzakiTetsuya · · Score: 1

      I think MS screwing with WP7 is going to be inevitable but unintentional. Given the in fighting corporate culture at MS, negligence is more plausible than out right malice.

      --
      Non impediti ratione cogitationus.
    2. Re:Like Microsoft cares by Osgeld · · Score: 1

      why not? it happens every day in open land and yet developers still develop

    3. Re:Like Microsoft cares by GodfatherofSoul · · Score: 1

      I meant MS kicked Palm's ass.

      --
      I swear to God...I swear to God! That is NOT how you treat your human!
    4. Re:Like Microsoft cares by Coppit · · Score: 1

      That and Windows Mobile sucks as a mobile or embedded platform.

      What makes you think that we're talking about Windows Mobile? See some of the demos for Windows 8 on ARM.

  8. Waiting for Nokia to tank... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    M$ is simply waiting for Nokia to tank further. When the price is right they to will own a phone maker.

    1. Re:Waiting for Nokia to tank... by lsolano · · Score: 1

      Absolutely.

      I can not understand how Nokia insists on WP7 when users everywhere want to buy the N9 with meego.

      It's even funny when users are asking for something they want to buy and the CEO thinks they're all wrong, that WP7 is the way to go. It is the easiest business: people is already telling you what product they want, you just to produce it and sell it.

  9. Wait, what? by fuzzyfuzzyfungus · · Score: 1

    By " Windows Phone is now the only platform that does so with equal opportunity for all partners." he means "Well, except for Nokia, who is our pet OEM, with whom we have a cozy special alliance..."

    Obviously, the biggest potential downside of the Google/Motorola acquisition is the effect on other current Android device producers, so MS can reasonably be expected to say something like that; but come on. It was not so very long ago that Microsoft and Nokia were shamelessly leveraging one another's dynamic synergies, right there in public, and now they want us to believe that Windows Phone is all equal opportunity for everyone and fuzzy kittens?

  10. Microsoft talking about Open? by Superken7 · · Score: 1

    Can Microsoft really say they provide a truly open mobile ecosystem? There are a lot of closed doors in the WP7 platform, starting with its source code NOT being available, which is all that's really open about Android.

    1. Re:Microsoft talking about Open? by sgt+scrub · · Score: 1

      Maybe they mean the source to applications sold for the WP7 platform will be freely visible and open to the public. I mean, aren't they all going to be HTML and Javascript?

      --
      Having to work for a living is the root of all evil.
    2. Re:Microsoft talking about Open? by Kalriath · · Score: 1

      Windows Phone is not Windows Mobile. It's not even slightly related.

      --
      For a site about things like basic rights, Slashdot users sure do like to censor "dissent".
    3. Re:Microsoft talking about Open? by __aazsst3756 · · Score: 1

      The base source code is available for OS X, but Apple openly talks about their desire to control all levels of code in the ecosystem. Note that just the base code for Android is available as well, not the high end goodness that really makes it shine. In this regard Android is about as open as Apple's OS X. The difference is for some reason Google spins Android as "Open", and Apple does not.

  11. Open? Huh? by UnknowingFool · · Score: 1

    Did I wake up in an alternate universe this morning? The Windows Phone 7 platform is not only closed source but also a walled garden just like iOS and others. I knew I shouldn't accepted that drink from that gray goblin last night. Everyone knows you can only trust green goblins.

    --
    Well, there's spam egg sausage and spam, that's not got much spam in it.
    1. Re:Open? Huh? by bonch · · Score: 1

      Microsoft is referring to the fact that Google withholds Android source from non-privileged partners. You don't hear about it much on Slashdot because this is vehemently pro-Google territory.

    2. Re:Open? Huh? by UnknowingFool · · Score: 1

      Does MS treat all of their partners equally? The Nokia deal seems to suggest otherwise. It reminds me of the FUD Linux TCO argent they used saying that Linux would cost more due to migration costs while not acknowledging that migrating to Windows also incurs migration costs even migrating from one version to another.

      --
      Well, there's spam egg sausage and spam, that's not got much spam in it.
    3. Re:Open? Huh? by Archangel+Michael · · Score: 1

      Microsoft has little to say in this matter, because, last time I checked, Microsoft doesn't give source to even its partners either. And Microsoft doesn't have a leg to stand on, having given Nokia a huge subsidy as it migrates to WP7. In fact the sales of WP7 compared to both Android and iOS is pathetic, they aren't just in third place, they are in a distant third place.

      I find whatever Microsoft says in relation to Phone Markets as pure ... wishful thinking and FUD depending on how you look at it.

      Disclaimer, I have a Moto DroidX

      --
      Agent K: A *person* is smart. People are dumb, stupid, panicky animals, and you know it.
    4. Re:Open? Huh? by slack_justyb · · Score: 1

      Microsoft is referring to the fact that Google withholds Android source from non-privileged partners.

      Really and what do you think Microsoft does with its source code to WP7 with their partners?

    5. Re:Open? Huh? by Penguinisto · · Score: 1

      Microsoft is referring to the fact that Google withholds Android source from non-privileged partners.

      Bullshit. I can download it right now, and I'm not even an OEM.

      --
      Quo usque tandem abutere, Nimbus, patientia nostra?
    6. Re:Open? Huh? by DragonWriter · · Score: 1

      they aren't just in third place, they are in a distant third place.

      Actually, a distant fourth in most analysis I've seen, falling way behind RIM. (But RIM is falling faster.)

  12. Not. by wsxyz · · Score: 5, Funny

    That's not true.

    Google is firmly committed to a vendor neutral policy with Android and the Motorola Mobility subsidiary will be firewalled off from Google and independently managed to ensure that stays true.

    In fact, Google would be happy to see their own investments obliterated by their handset competitors... eh, I mean partners... and their own handset division becoming a bottomless cash sink, as long as it helps advance the Android platform.

    So, Microsoft really needs to stop with the FUD and accept that Google really is an altruistic and idealistic organization that truly cares only about making life better for everyone.

    1. Re:Not. by pak9rabid · · Score: 1

      So, Microsoft really needs to stop with the FUD and accept that Google really is an altruistic and idealistic organization that truly cares only about making life better for everyone.

      Even more than making money? Somehow I doubt that.

    2. Re:Not. by bonch · · Score: 2, Insightful

      What a bunch of fanboy nonsense.

      Google isn't an "altruistic and idealistic organization that truly cares only about making life better for everyone." They're a multi-billion-dollar megacorp whose business is based on a closed-source search-and-advertising platform dependent on selling your personal data to advertising partners. They make sleazy non-neutral internet deals with vendors just to push Android. They withhold Android source from non-privileged partners and ship closed technology like Flash, AAC, and MP3 support in Chrome, even as they preach about openness. Android is a free product pumped into a new market to maintain the dominance of the core business and kill off competitors who can't afford to compete with an artificial price, the same way Internet Explorer was pumped into the browser market to kill off Netscape and keep the Windows platform relevant.

      The benevolent little tech company from ten years ago is long gone. In its place is a gigantic advertising conglomerate under investigation around the world for antitrust violations and privacy breaches. Google is another Microsoft and is no better.

      Microsoft still elicits a predictable reaction on Slashdot, repetition of the term "FUD" as if it automatically counters all arguments. And, as always, there will be mysterious Underrated moderations to such comments because Overrated/Underrated moderations aren't subject to meta-moderation, a loophole that Slashdot has left unclosed for years. I think what has happened to this community is that Reddit and Hacker News drew most of the more objective posters away, leaving the hardcore ideologues behind who automatically stand behind Google and automatically hate Microsoft, Apple, Sun, and anything else that competes with Google. Slashdot's overall position was always skewed by default, but there was actually a degree of objectivity that used to shine through in the comment sections. That very rarely occurs today.

      It's really quite fascinating that there isn't more outcry over the fact that a closed-source product from a corporation has become the gatekeeper for the web, but apparently, if you use Linux for your business, all is forgiven, and you are a pack of angels trying to make the world a better place rather than another scum-sucking corporation leveraging their monopoly to make a dollar.

    3. Re:Not. by wsxyz · · Score: 1

      You're so wrong.

      In fact, I think it's fair to call Google an "honorary non-profit charity" because, although they aren't "technically" a non-profit charity, they selflessly contribute more to the world than some of those other supposedly non-profit "charities" like, for example, Médecins Sans Frontières.

    4. Re:Not. by TemporalBeing · · Score: 2

      Google isn't an "altruistic and idealistic organization that truly cares only about making life better for everyone." They're a multi-billion-dollar megacorp whose business is based on a closed-source search-and-advertising platform dependent on selling your personal data to advertising partners. They make sleazy non-neutral internet deals with vendors just to push Android. They withhold Android source from non-privileged partners and ship closed technology like Flash, AAC, and MP3 support in Chrome, even as they preach about openness. Android is a free product pumped into a new market to maintain the dominance of the core business and kill off competitors who can't afford to compete with an artificial price, the same way Internet Explorer was pumped into the browser market to kill off Netscape and keep the Windows platform relevant.

      Google is most often critized for the altruism of its ranks, and the optimism that it portrays in everything it does publicly. I'm not saying they don't have issues (what organization doesn't?) but they have certainly done a very good job of keeping to their motto of "Do No Evil".

      The benevolent little tech company from ten years ago is long gone. In its place is a gigantic advertising conglomerate under investigation around the world for antitrust violations and privacy breaches. Google is another Microsoft and is no better.

      Interesting you should bring that up...everyone one of those can be traced to Microsoft - either directly or indirectly; and every one of them will fail to find Google guilty of anything. The fact is that Microsoft can't stand that it was found guilty in both the US and EU of Antitrust violations and it wants to see all of its competitors - Apple, Google, IBM, etc - brought up on similar charges and found Guilty too. Thus far, nothing has stuck despite all the crap that Microsoft has shot into the fan.

      Microsoft still elicits a predictable reaction on Slashdot, repetition of the term "FUD" as if it automatically counters all arguments. And, as always, there will be mysterious Underrated moderations to such comments because Overrated/Underrated moderations aren't subject to meta-moderation, a loophole that Slashdot has left unclosed for years. I think what has happened to this community is that Reddit and Hacker News drew most of the more objective posters away, leaving the hardcore ideologues behind who automatically stand behind Google and automatically hate Microsoft, Apple, Sun, and anything else that competes with Google.

      Microsoft gets that reaction based on their own actions. There is little that comes out of Microsoft that is actually worthwhile, not based on some take over the world scheme, and useful to people in general. Outside of the firms paid by Microsoft to spew only Microsoft favoring news, everyone else has wised up to them. Even some of those paid firms are starting to wise up too.

      Slashdot's overall position was always skewed by default, but there was actually a degree of objectivity that used to shine through in the comment sections. That very rarely occurs today.

      I do agree that the objectivity in Slashdot has considerably declined.

      It's really quite fascinating that there isn't more outcry over the fact that a closed-source product from a corporation has become the gatekeeper for the web, but apparently, if you use Linux for your business, all is forgiven, and you are a pack of angels trying to make the world a better place rather than another scum-sucking corporation leveraging their monopoly to make a dollar.

      Google contributes quite a bit to the open source community. Yes, they may not publish everything they do for anyone to garnish - FLOSS principles do not guarantee, require, or want that. However, they also provide funding for many different FLOSS projects - whether hiring interns for the summer (

      --
      Truth is like the sun. You can shut it out for a time, but it ain't goin' away. - Elvis Presley (source: imdb.com)
    5. Re:Not. by jedidiah · · Score: 2

      Other phone vendors may view this (rightly) in terms of the lawsuits that Apple et al have been bringing against Google and view the acquisition purely on those terms. This acquisition didn't occur in a vacuum. So more than one interpretation is plausible. You don't have to jump to the most pessimistic option possible.

      It's certainly a perception that Google needs to manage though.

      The FUD here is more real here than the danger.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    6. Re:Not. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Google contributes quite a bit to the open source community

      Google overall contributes less than 0.5% of their profit to open source. They're one of the lowest contributors per capital to linux despite their entire operation running on it. When Google contributes some little x86-only trinket like Snappy people fall over themselves about how awesome Google is for open source, when really they are mostly just a user.

      There is little that comes out of Microsoft that is actually worthwhile, not based on some take over the world scheme, and useful to people in general

      For all the bad that Microsoft does, they actually make products. You can still run Windows 3.1 for Workgroups if you want to, or old version of Office or Encarta. If Google disables your account you have nothing. Can you still even access the whole usenet archive? For how much longer?

    7. Re:Not. by slack_justyb · · Score: 1

      Google isn't an "altruistic and idealistic organization that truly cares only about making life better for everyone.

      And the sky's blue. What new facet are you trying to add here? Did you not catch that the parent was being sarcastic? Being a big company tends to make you less those other things. I don't think anyone here is surprised by it.

      closed-source search-and-advertising platform dependent on selling your personal data to advertising partners.

      Wow, you just won't quit on the social commentary. People are out to make a buck, get use to it. That includes Microsoft, Google, Apple, etc... We here at Slashdot have come to terms with this. We don't like it, we'll fight it anyway possible, but it's always going to be there.

      hey withhold Android source from non-privileged partners and ship closed technology like Flash, AAC, and MP3 support in Chrome, even as they preach about openness.

      Among other things... Geez, you make it sound like one bad drop kills the pond. They also ship open video and audio codecs and Chrome's source in open as well. So unless you're RMS, I'm not seeing the problem here. You have to understand, there are those who think FOSS and FOSS only / those who think FOSS in places and closed in other until an open alternative comes along.

      Android is a free product pumped into a new market to maintain the dominance of the core business and kill off competitors who can't afford to compete with an artificial price

      The same has been said about Linux et al. New argument please.

      The benevolent little tech company from ten years ago is long gone.

      Duh. See first paragraph.

      Google is another Microsoft and is no better.

      Really? Are they paying ARM to put nothing but Android on their hardware like Wintel? Just curious.

      Microsoft still elicits a predictable reaction on Slashdot, repetition of the term "FUD" as if it automatically counters all arguments.

      Because no one has the time to actually make a three page long argument, also, because that is one of Microsoft's biggest tactics. Look I didn't make it that way, Microsoft did that for us. I wish I could change people's mind to use some else and we can all just assume FUD. It tends to make things clearer on the board. But hey if it ain't broke...

      blah, blah, blah...a loophole that Slashdot has left unclosed for years.

      Like it or leave it. The latter would very likely reduce the amount of replies I put to Slashdot to people like you, who have this kind of problem with Slashdot.

      but there was actually a degree of objectivity that used to shine through in the comment sections. That very rarely occurs today.

      Please see my comment about companies and size in the first paragraph. The amount moderators care is inversely related to the amount of traffic. Note the parallel one can draw to say Google, Microsoft, Apple, WalMart, geez we could keep going here...

      It's really quite fascinating that there isn't more outcry over the fact that a closed-source product from a corporation has become the gatekeeper for the web

      Really? Gatekeeper? I'll remember that when I go though my ISP to get to the web. (note to self: All request to the web go like this me -> ISP -> Google -> web... check!)

      if you use Linux for your business, all is forgiven

      I'm not sure my opinion counts nor if I forgive a company or not. I really don't base my forgiveness on what OS someone uses, but how they use it. It just seems that Microsoft is usually in the business of being open until the lawyers come out and say no. Google seems to be open and when the lawyers come out they're like, "crap it was GPLed."

      are a pa

    8. Re:Not. by blarkon · · Score: 1
      "So, Microsoft really needs to stop with the FUD and accept that Google really is an altruistic and idealistic organization that truly cares only about making life better for everyone."
      They gave me a bunny.

      Seriously though dude, a little less Kool Aid with your cornflakes. Google is a corporation and has shareholders. Their sole purpose is to generate revenue. The "altruism" thing is just marketing, like when Apple tells you they "think different".

    9. Re:Not. by codecore · · Score: 1

      I don't get the statement "Microsoft could probably do a great mobile platform, if they were willing to sacrifice the desktop".

      What does it mean to "sacrifice the desktop"? Stop releaseing OS for desktop computers? Seriously? Why? And who's going to fill that gap? Linux? Really? Which distribution? You can all agree on that?

      Why would walking away from the destop suddenly enable MS to be able to great on great mobile platform? Are they resource constrained? Are they constrained by management? Perhaps that would free some of those Windows designers to work on this forthcoming "great mobile platform".

      I hold the opinion that you can thank MS for the fact that we have a dominate desktop hardware platform, and that you can get these amazing devices at the prices you can. I believe that they enabled the commodization of personal computers, resulting in defacto standards, low prices, and phenominal increases in performance. Truly, you can be critical of MS in their failure to stay relevent in the mobile space, as well as the stagnatin of innovation of the browser. While we may dis-agree on what constitutes a "great mobile platform", I hold that the WP7 is evolving in to that even as I write this. I expect that WP7 and then WP8 will be very competative from a developer and performance standpoint. I make no predictions on market share, or app-store anti-trust issues.

    10. Re:Not. by TemporalBeing · · Score: 1

      FLOSS principles do not guarantee, require, or want that.

      RMS begs to differ.

      Well, start by quoting the whole line:

      Google contributes quite a bit to the open source community. Yes, they may not publish everything they do for anyone to garnish - FLOSS principles do not guarantee, require, or want that.

      Now look at what RMS says and what his organizations (e.g. GNU and FSF) say - and you will see that they are pretty much in line with that quote. RMS has no problem with people using GPL'd works (even his own) an d not releaseing changes to the community - so long as they do release the changes to anyone that they do distribute to. That's not to say that he doesn't have problems with Cloud Computing (he does); but how Google is otherwise using the software and the licenses is not an issue. Please read more on the GPL, etc - go over the FAQs, etc. at FSF's site too.

      FLOSS principles don't guarantee that the entire community gets access to every little change in source code - but that those who are being distributed to do (and anyone supporting them by extension of acting as an agent).

      --
      Truth is like the sun. You can shut it out for a time, but it ain't goin' away. - Elvis Presley (source: imdb.com)
    11. Re:Not. by TemporalBeing · · Score: 1

      I don't get the statement "Microsoft could probably do a great mobile platform, if they were willing to sacrifice the desktop".
      What does it mean to "sacrifice the desktop"?

      Microsoft has always been reluctant to do a true mobile computing platform as they fear cannibalizing the desktop market as it is the mainstay of their business. If they got over that issue and really went after the mobile computing platform - including porting Office to it - then they have the ability to do a very good mobile platform. The industry could have been doing mobile 10 years ago - but Microsoft held everyone back because of not wanting to risk losing the desktop platform. If you ever wondered why Windows Mobile looked like and acted like a standard Windows Desktop - that why - to discourage mobile computing and push people to the desktop platforms.

      So no, Microsoft doesn't need to walk away from the desktop platform; but rather pursue the mobile platform irregardless of how it may impact the desktop platform.

      So now instead, they are looking at losing the desktop platform to Android and iOS as they have no viable mobile offerings, and they are still not willing to put Office on the mobile platforms. Office would need to be updated for a true touchscreen style interface, as would Windows - and no, WP7/WP8's Metro UI does not do it.

      I hold the opinion that you can thank MS for the fact that we have a dominate desktop hardware platform, and that you can get these amazing devices at the prices you can. I believe that they enabled the commodization of personal computers, resulting in defacto standards, low prices, and phenominal increases in performance.

      Computing could be a lot cheaper if not for the artificially inflated prices due to the cost of Windows. Manufacturers have time and again made cheaper systems running Linux - systems that people would and did buy - only to have Microsoft start complaining and raising a fuss in yanking licensing programs, etc. from them so they had little to no choice but to continue with doing a Windows Only platform. The present mobile platform transformation is taking care of that - though Microsoft is still complaining to high heaven and threatening patent lawsuits instead since they have little leverage over the various players.

      Truly, you can be critical of MS in their failure to stay relevent in the mobile space, as well as the stagnatin of innovation of the browser

      Microsoft has caused stagnation in many areas of computing - from the Desktop to Browser to and far beyond. Linux has relieved some of those areas (e.g. servers, clusters, HPC, etc.), and KDE4 are again revolutionizing the desktop - ultimately forcing Apple, Microsoft, and GNOME to follow. (Much of what is in Win7 was in KDE4 long before Win7 was even announced.)

      While we may dis-agree on what constitutes a "great mobile platform", I hold that the WP7 is evolving in to that even as I write this. I expect that WP7 and then WP8 will be very competative from a developer and performance standpoint. I make no predictions on market share, or app-store anti-trust issues.

      Windows 8 (and WP8 by extension) will not make any significant mark in the history of Microsoft other than to perhaps show how irrelevant Microsoft has become - though Win7 is already showing that. By the numbers, Win7 looks to be a great seller - until you really investigate them and see that most are using the Downgrade rights to move back to WinXP. Win8 will do little more to help that - and from what they have said - will be alienating developers even more by pushing nearly all Windows developers into a second-class citizenry on the platform. Now granted, that's the desktop end; however, Microsoft is looking to link the Desktop and mobile offerings via Win8 - so you have the same platform on your phone, tablet, and laptop - and in doing so everyone will be fo

      --
      Truth is like the sun. You can shut it out for a time, but it ain't goin' away. - Elvis Presley (source: imdb.com)
  13. Liars by pavon · · Score: 3, Informative

    Straight from their own mouth

    * Nokia will help drive and define the future of Windows Phone.
    * Nokia and Microsoft will closely collaborate on development, joint marketing initiatives and a shared development roadmap

    They are both in bed with a hardware manufacturer now, have both claimed it won't affect other licenses of the OS, and both have something to loose if they alienate the other OEMs.

    1. Re:Liars by HiThere · · Score: 1

      Actually, it's not clear that Google has much interest in the "Motorola Mobility" division that it just bought, except for the patents. Well, that's not quite right. I should have said "in the current products of"... As has been previously mentioned, Google is interested in their patent holdings, and it generally prefers to innovate where there isn't a lot of competition. So the current employees are probably going to find themelves busily engaged in the design of something new. Someone mentioned "Google TV", and I suppose that's a possibility. But others have looked more towards an electronic wallet that will replace credit and debit cards. (Personally I'd be leery of that one, but it could be *very* convenient.) Or it could be a game machine. (Probably not, as that's an area that already has lots of competition...but maybe, if they've got a good enough new idea.) Or maybe a phone with a "virtual you" that can take messages for you, and deliver prerecorded messages to pre-defined callers. (Google would need an breakthrough in artificial speech recognition to do what I'm thinking, but perhaps...)

      Anyway, you get the idea I have of what they're up to. And it's not the standard smartphone market. The question is, how could they fund it? Their clear preference is for soft-sell ads, so that's probably the area to look, but I'm no salesman.

      --

      I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
  14. Not Going to Happen by segedunum · · Score: 1

    Nice try, and I suppose they had to, but there are two premier platforms in the mobile world in iOS and Android and one is demonstrably closed and the other mostly open and free for manufacturers to put on their devices despite the Motorola takeover which I suspect has more to do with other reasons than Google wanting to make phones. Two platforms are more than enough, and there were even question marks for a while as to whether Android would gain traction and have the developer base of iOS. I just don't see what Windows brings. It's neither one thing nor the other.

  15. Poor Nokia suffered the Osborne effect by bogaboga · · Score: 3, Informative

    Poor Nokia suffered the Osborne Effect, whereby sales of current available products plummet after the announcement of un-available 'future' products.

    Things have changed a lot! In my little world, Microsoft is of no consequence, and that's a good thing. I will not touch Microsoft products (including NOKIA), as a matter of principal.

    1. Re:Poor Nokia suffered the Osborne effect by h4rr4r · · Score: 3, Interesting

      No, poor Nokia suffered the effect of taking MS's money.
      They kill everything they touch.

      Nokia had a good platform and good phone, they gave that away for a little bit of free money now at the expense of their future.

    2. Re:Poor Nokia suffered the Osborne effect by StormReaver · · Score: 1

      In my little world, Microsoft is of no consequence, and that's a good thing. I will not touch Microsoft products (including NOKIA), as a matter of principal.

      It's even better than that for me. Not only won't I touch Microsoft/Nokia products out of principle, I won't touch them because I have absolutely no need for them. Linux and Android fill 100% of my personal and professional needs. I won't use Microsoft/Nokia products because I have far better products already.

    3. Re:Poor Nokia suffered the Osborne effect by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      I also fill my car's gas tank with ideology.

    4. Re:Poor Nokia suffered the Osborne effect by a+sad+dude · · Score: 1

      More like Elop Effect.

    5. Re:Poor Nokia suffered the Osborne effect by Imbrondir · · Score: 1

      Actually it might be a new beast entirely through combining the Osborne Effect and Ratner effect, to become the ultimate monster: The Elop effect!

    6. Re:Poor Nokia suffered the Osborne effect by ihavenospine · · Score: 1

      No, poor Nokia suffered the effect of taking MS's money. They kill everything they touch.

      Well, the future sometimes bring unexpected plot twists... Even if its in the long term. http://www.pcworld.com/article/5156/microsoft_to_invest_in_apple_jobs_ellison_on_board.html

    7. Re:Poor Nokia suffered the Osborne effect by h4rr4r · · Score: 1

      Small difference between "Here is some money to kill your company" and "Damn, we had better keep the only competitor that we allowed to survive afloat."

  16. So where can I download the source code by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    So I can root and build my windows phone without all the cruft I don't want?

  17. LOL LOL ROTFL LOL by gl4ss · · Score: 1

    yep, LOL is appropriate for this.

    wp7 is open equally to everyone - that is it's equally closed to everyone not picked by random chance of circumstances. it's miles more closed than windows ce. and don't get me started on 3rd party devs- basically for symbian, android and even palms there were(are) 3rd party products which simply will not be possible on wp without getting first party involved if you were to port them over to windows phone. and that's not open, that's opposite of open. and open platform is where you can just go ahead and change/hack whatever you want to achieve some new functionality - not so on wp.

    just the minimum hw requirements on wp7 say that it's not open - if it were, there wouldn't be those restrictions(which are bendable of course, if you somehow manage to manage the ms managers to allow it).

    which 3rd parties are then happy about this new development? well those which manage to bag coding deals to clone more features into wp, as they get to bill MS for them dearly and that group of companies is a very limited party(too bad temptation of VM only 3rd party apps was so big when they lined up the current windows phone - sure, the windows mobile wince phones sucked, but they had ample possibilities for 3rd party developers besides coding solitaire and minesweeper for the 45th time).

    --
    world was created 5 seconds before this post as it is.
    1. Re:LOL LOL ROTFL LOL by codecore · · Score: 1

      Yet another questionable assertion that OSS==GREAT && CSS==BAD. I wonder if haveing acces to the source code is all that important. Lotus was 123 great, in spite of not having access to the MS-DOS source code. Same with Turbo Pascal. How about Real Player? Yep. Visio (shapeware)? Yep. WinAmp? Again, yes. Chome browser? You bet! Again, access to the OS source code would have brought these projects next to nothing. They were/are great in spite of having no access to the windows codebase.

  18. Re:Assholes by i_b_don · · Score: 2

    Seriously? The definition we all think as an "open ecosystem" is the PC. The opposite of an "open ecosystem" is the Apple Apps Store or locked down cell phones.

    All I have to say to MS is "show me". Words are cheap.

    d

    --
    all language nazi's will burne in heil!
  19. Windows Phone 7 Quality, Security, Reliability by DickBreath · · Score: 2

    Only Windows Phone 7 has the kind of Quality, Stability, Security, Reliability and Robustness that you have come to expect from the Microsoft name.


    (I'll pause for a moment so you can stop laughing.)


    Remember Windows Mobile?

    Sidekick / Danger?

    Windows Kin Phone?

    Remember Microsoft and Sendo? (You can google for it. I said google, not bing.)

    --

    I'll see your senator, and I'll raise you two judges.
    1. Re:Windows Phone 7 Quality, Security, Reliability by moorster · · Score: 1

      Use Google for search? Why, so they can censor my results and make everything rosy? I don't think so.

  20. Google obviously bought Motorola for one reason by DickBreath · · Score: 1

    No matter what Microsoft says, it is obvious why Google bought Motorola.

    Patents.

    --

    I'll see your senator, and I'll raise you two judges.
    1. Re:Google obviously bought Motorola for one reason by mjwx · · Score: 1

      No matter what Microsoft says, it is obvious why Google bought Motorola.

      Patents.

      Google never denied it, but it's not the only reason. Right up there with patents is Google's need to diversify.

      --
      Calling someone a "hater" only means you can not rationally rebut their argument.
  21. Of course MS is well known by Anomalyst · · Score: 1

    For the fair and even handed way it treats third parties with which it supplies its crufty "solutions" and the people who have the misfortune to purchase the resulting products.

    --
    There is no right to feel safe thru security vaudeville at the expense of everyone's freedom, privacy and tax money.
    1. Re:Of course MS is well known by moorster · · Score: 1

      Hey, I love my WP7. No "cruft" here. Meanwhile my Chrome browser won't stop crashing on CentOS so I'm ditching it.

  22. Re:Seriously you guys... by NatasRevol · · Score: 4, Funny

    Or the ... wait for it ... MicroPhone.

    Sorry.

    --
    There are two types of people in the world: Those who crave closure
  23. Start the Pool by chill · · Score: 2

    Considering MS is second only to Apple in outright denials of things they're actively pursuing and ready to pull the trigger on, how long until Microsoft just outright buys Nokia?

    --
    Learning HOW to think is more important than learning WHAT to think.
    1. Re:Start the Pool by high_rolla · · Score: 1

      And if MS is considering this then this may well be part of their plan:
      1. Announce partnership with Nokia.
      2. Watch it's value plummet as a result.
      3. Buy Nokia at a reduced price (saving much more than the cost of the partnership in the first place)

      They already have an ex MS guy at the helm too. No doubt already re-aligning Nokia management with the MS way of doing things. If Nokia is bought it would be quite a streamlined process to integrate them.

      --
      Ryans Tutorials - A collection of technology tutorials.
    2. Re:Start the Pool by chill · · Score: 1

      Buying Nokia would get Microsoft a nice patent pool, which seems to be the name of the game today.

      --
      Learning HOW to think is more important than learning WHAT to think.
  24. Open by BabyDuckHat · · Score: 1

    They keep using that word. I do not think it means what they think it means.

  25. Analysts are idiots by Tridus · · Score: 2

    This type of "analysis" is what you expect from Gardiner. It's nonsense. You're bang on. The fact of the matter is that there's consumer demand for Android, and there isn't for Windows Phone.

    The handset makers will go where the sales are and expecting them to pay Microsoft for a platform that people don't want over a free one that people do want is lunacy. It's not happening. This only changes if Microsoft can drum up some demand for WP7 hardware. Maybe Nokia can do that.

    --
    -- "So they told me that using the download page to download something was not something they anticipated." - Bill Gates
    1. Re:Analysts are idiots by oakgrove · · Score: 2

      How much do you jokes get paid to regurgitate the same talking points over and over ad nauseum?

      --
      The soylentnews experiment has been a dismal failure.
    2. Re:Analysts are idiots by DragonWriter · · Score: 2

      With the exception of a small minority of geeks, people buy Android because that's what the handset makers are using on the handsets, not because "The people demand their Android."

      Most smartphone handset makers have Windows and Android offerings and iOS, OTOH, does quite well with only one handset maker supporting it. So I don't think the facts support your claim that the success of Android is simply a factor of the number of handset makers supporting it compared to the alternatives.

      I think its much more likely that consumer perception (either of the OS itself or of the features of the phones that handset makers choose to put the OS on) is the main factor.

      You're correct that the handset makers will go where the sales are - if Motorola suddenly has favored status with Android releases at the expense of Samsung & HTC's sales

      Yes, and since Google's main interest with Android is as a gateway to Google's online services, that's exactly why Google won't kneecap non-Google handset manufacturers that way. There's no upside for them.

    3. Re:Analysts are idiots by spitzak · · Score: 1

      BULL.

      There are both WP7 and Android phones being sold for equivalent prices at my closest TMobile store. They are right there in front, displayed side by side, along with black berries and a lot of less-smart phones. The labels clearly state which are running Android or Windows. The users can see and choose. The hardware looks to me to be pretty much identical (in fact the phone I have came in both versions).

      The people have a choice and it is pretty obvious how they have spoken.

    4. Re:Analysts are idiots by Americano · · Score: 1

      First mover advantage. iPhone sales started 3 years before the first WP7 phone went on sale; Android phones went on sale 2 years before the first WP7 phone went on sale. People tend to stick with what they know, and what they have an existing investment of time, energy and money in.

      People aren't "demanding Android," they're saying "I really don't want to have to adjust to a whole new phone, buy a whole bunch of new apps, and set up a bunch of new stuff on my computer to manage things."

    5. Re:Analysts are idiots by Americano · · Score: 1

      The people have a choice and it is pretty obvious how they have spoken.

      Yes, and that choice is, "buy a new Android phone to replace my existing Android phone, or buy a new WP7 phone to replace my existing Android phone?" Unless there's a compelling reason to switch, people will stick with what they know. This doesn't mean that consumers "demand Android," it means they already have Android phones - likely because the iPhone wasn't available on their carrier, or they absolutely hate Apple and refuse to buy Apple products (seriously: read about some of the attitudes here http://www.businessinsider.com/smartphone-survey-results-2011-4?op=1), and now that they have an Android model, they're sticking with it because it's easier than switching. "Not hating" something isn't the same as "demanding" something.

    6. Re:Analysts are idiots by losfromla · · Score: 1

      My sister just got a phone, she runs windows computers at her house, at work, etc, she is no geek, not by a long shot. She got an android phone, probably because everyone she knows has an android phone (she didn't consult me before buying, I would have said Android of course). Suck that, microshaft.

      --
      Only I can judge you.
    7. Re:Analysts are idiots by spitzak · · Score: 1

      In my case it was "replace my stupid phone with a smart one". WP7 and Android were equally incompatible so that was not a deciding factor. I suspect that my case is still not unusual today. Also I fail to see why "I hate Apple" translates into "buy Android, not WP7". Also I have certainly know people replacing iPhones with Android and vice-versa.

      Sorry your attempts to explain this away are not standing up and I am not believing you one bit.

    8. Re:Analysts are idiots by Alex+Belits · · Score: 1

      First mover advantage. iPhone sales started 3 years before the first WP7 phone went on sale;

      Moar liek iPhone wiped the floor with Windows Mobile that was then common in over-expensive "business" smartphones because this it was "what the handset makers are using on the handsets". And somewhat damaged RIM.

      Now Android (hardly a great OS but certainly superior to all common alternatives) is in the process of wiping the floor with RIM (whose product is not atrociously bad but lacks flexibility) and competing with iPhone (slick UI, less substance, single idiosyncratic vendor).

      Seeing that, Microsoft taken over Nokia, with a goal to sacrifice the company in its attempt to re-establish Windows Phone (formerly Mobile, formerly CE) as a legitimate choice of a platform.

      gg Microsoft.

      --
      Contrary to the popular belief, there indeed is no God.
    9. Re:Analysts are idiots by Serpents · · Score: 1

      it means they already have Android phones - likely because the iPhone wasn't available on their carrier, or they absolutely hate Apple and refuse to buy Apple products

      I believe the latter is true. Where I live all the major carriers have offered various versions of iPhones for more than 3 years and they're pretty rare. Most people choose android for its relative openness and because there are various phone models to choose from - anything from cheap entry-level models to beasts like Nexus S or Galaxy S 2. Not to mention that perceived price/value ratio is pretty low if you care about functionality and not the apple logo. When it comes to windows over the last six years I have actually met just one person using an Omnia and he's kind of a luddite...

  26. PCMag Analysts? by mevets · · Score: 1

    Prostitutes is closer to the mark. The referenced article contains this doozy:
    "How would they know for sure that they're getting all the same OS updates as quickly as Motorola?"
    Could the same FUD not be directed at the MS/Nokia love-in?

    The sad part is that Motorola Mobile should now be on death watch.

  27. Oh Oh. by sgt+scrub · · Score: 1

    The most popular rap artist is white. The tallest man in the NBA is Chinese. Microsoft is lecturing people on fairness.

    I believe I know why it is so hot in Texas. I'll know for sure if Perry and Buchanan win.

    --
    Having to work for a living is the root of all evil.
    1. Re:Oh Oh. by moorster · · Score: 1

      Romney in 2012!

  28. Equality for all partners by DrXym · · Score: 1
    How is bankrolling Nokia equality for all partners? Does anyone seriously think Nokia flipped over to Windows Phone without some substantial financial incentives and preferential treatment?

    I think its right to raise concerns about what happens to Android but it's laughable for any analyst to pretend Microsoft is any better.

    1. Re:Equality for all partners by moorster · · Score: 1

      Something tells me Microsoft would jump at the chance to give the same deal to any of the other manufacturers who are interested in accepting it. That sounds pretty equal to me.

  29. Equal opportunity.. by Bert64 · · Score: 1

    Actually, Meego is arguably the only "neutral" mobile OS these days, since Nokia dropped it there's only really Intel pushing it, and they don't make phones.
    Windows may or may not have a special deal with Nokia...
    Also, Google haven't even completed the purchase of Motorola yet, and who's to tell what their strategy will be once they have?
    They might have bought Motorola purely for the patents, and shut down their (unprofitable) phone design and manufacture business, which would actually benefit rather than harm the other Android OEMs.

    --
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    1. Re:Equal opportunity.. by moorster · · Score: 1

      What about the OS I started working on in my garage? That's still completely untethered to any manufacturer. Of course, I've only written about 12 lines of code so far...

  30. 15th Aug 2011 - The real day Ballmer lost his job by phonewebcam · · Score: 1

    Coiffin, meet nail. He just blew the m$ mobile plan B: extortion through litigation, since plan A - a quality mobile OS - is clearly dead in the water.

  31. Re:Assholes by lwriemen · · Score: 1

    Microsoft didn't make the PC an "open ecosystem". (If I'm interpreting your comment correctly.) IBM's "choice" to make the PC an open platform (and choosing DOS) is the only reason Microsoft exists. (You can probably throw OS/2 and Linux into that statement as well.)

  32. Android and the Open Handset Alliance by DragonWriter · · Score: 1

    I love how it's assumed that somehow the acquisition of Moto will make Android less open to the Android alliance members...

    And you are assuming it won't.

    Which is a pretty reasonable assumption, since it is the Open Handset Alliance -- not Google -- that actually owns Android. When Google bought Android, they only held on to it until the OHA was formed, at which point it was transferred to the OHA.

    Does anyone outside of Google and maybe Moto execs know the exact implications?

    I'm pretty sure the OHA would have to know of anything that transferred ownership of Android back to Google from the OHA.

    1. Re:Android and the Open Handset Alliance by TheRaven64 · · Score: 1
      You're looking at it the wrong way. Handset manufacturers don't care about openness as an abstraction, they care about two things:
      1. Their ability to differentiate their phones from their competitors.
      2. The license fees that they need to pay for the OS.

      Openness helps with the first part, but Microsoft also allows handset makers to customise their offering a lot, so it's not a huge advantage. The free-beer side effect of being open source helps a lot with the latter, but if you're paying $1 per handset for a software license that lets you sell the phone for $10 more then free isn't an advantage.

      The OHA sounds great on paper, but Google is still responsible for writing the vast majority of the code in Android. If Google is now making handsets, then this means that future versions of Android are likely to be tailored to the capabilities of the Google devices, making it harder for other manufacturers to differentiate their offerings.

      Of course, since it's open, they can hire developers to improve their version, but that costs money. The question that they will be asking is whether it costs more to do this than it costs to pay MS for their OS.

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    2. Re:Android and the Open Handset Alliance by DragonWriter · · Score: 1

      The OHA sounds great on paper, but Google is still responsible for writing the vast majority of the code in Android. If Google is now making handsets, then this means that future versions of Android are likely to be tailored to the capabilities of the Google devices

      Not particularly.

      Google makes a browser (and a netbook OS, and a mobile OS) now, but while its web service offerings certainly will exploit the features of those platforms when they are available, they aren't tailored to those platforms.

      In the same way that tying Google Search to Chrome would be bad for Google, tying Android to Google hardware would be bad for Google.

      Android is a tool to open markets for Google services, not for Google hardware. Aside from patents, Google's acquisition of Motorola Mobility is more about using hardware as a tool to push Android and in turn to push Google services, not to use Android as a tool to sell hardware.

      Of course, since it's open, they can hire developers to improve their version, but that costs money. The question that they will be asking is whether it costs more to do this than it costs to pay MS for their OS.

      Well, no, the relevant question in that regard will be whether the cost of customizing Android is lower than the cost of licensing Windows plus the cost of customizing it, not simply whether the cost of customizing Android is less than the cost of licensing stock Windows.

      Of course, there are all kinds of other issues (perceived customer value in the platform from app availability, etc.)

  33. Hahahaahah by unity100 · · Score: 1

    Windows Phone is now the only platform that does so with equal opportunity for all partners - of microsoft

    -> until microsoft tries to screw its partners over, that is.

  34. That's installed base by pem · · Score: 3, Insightful
    Not current sales.

    And it's only in the US.

    Worldwide it's much grimmer for MS, but in the US it's pretty bad.

    1. Re:That's installed base by lowlevelio · · Score: 1

      MS defines sale as "sold to store and put in gigantic stock". As seen with xbox1/2. As seen with Zune. As seen with vista. It's untrustworthy figures to compare to other companies sales to *consumers*.

    2. Re:That's installed base by dwlovell · · Score: 1

      Agreed. MS will need to convert existing WinMo customers to WP7 while also converting dumbphone users as well as wooing people from other platforms. It will be an uphill battle. I am sure they intend to lose money on this for quite a while. Xbox wasn't exactly a doorbuster when it launched, but at least it had a platformer like Halo. WP7 needs a platform defining feature rather than simply playing catch-up.

    3. Re:That's installed base by mjwx · · Score: 1

      Not current sales.

      And it's only in the US.

      Worldwide it's much grimmer for MS, but in the US it's pretty bad.

      Somewhere around 7% and that includes a few WM 6.5 devices still being sold. The HD2 has only just stopped being offered by Aussie carriers meanwhile there's been a huge WP7 push but I know one person with a WP7 phone and he's a complete MS fanboy, but before WP7 was released he was looking at an Android powered HTC Desire.

      --
      Calling someone a "hater" only means you can not rationally rebut their argument.
  35. Re:Assholes by i_b_don · · Score: 1

    On Windows, anybody anywhere can make any software and sell it to anyone without talking to Microsoft. It is the most successful open platform around on both an economic and popularity basis. That was my point. If you think there is a better example please provide it.

    d

    --
    all language nazi's will burne in heil!
  36. 'Open Surface' by tooyoung · · Score: 1

    I'm sure that he meant open surface

  37. Re:Seriously you guys... by mangu · · Score: 1

    Where are the modpoints when one needs them?

  38. Re:Microsoft's Infighting & Corporate Schizoph by Fred+Or+Alive · · Score: 1

    Has any phone ever cost more than $1000? I've always seen the really top end hardware debut around $700 but rapidly fall to $500.

    There are various "luxury" manufacturers, like a Nokia subsidiary called Vertu, who will happily sell you a phone for £8600. If Wikipedia is to be believed, it runs the might power of Symbian, that most prestigious, high end powerhorse of phone OSs (well, actually EPOC32 was nice back in the day...).

    There seem to be a few more specialised "luxury" companies, like Goldvish and Mobiado, as well as ones branded as Dior, Tag Heuer etc. They all seem to be what would be considered feature phones (or perhaps low end smartphones in some cases) in stupidly expensive cases. But it's hard to tell, as the actual phone software and specs doesn't seem to be the main focus with these phones for some reason...

    --
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  39. Remember Microsoft "PlaysForSure"? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Microsoft developed this wonderful, vendor-independent system for supporting DRM of audio files in Windows, and many manufacturers adopted it in their mp3 player hardware and their on-line stores. What happened next?

    The Zune. Which introduced an entirely new and incompatible system, and, oh, by the way, Microsoft at the same time largely ended support for "PlaysForSure". How convenient. While Microsoft may not have done something similar *yet* for Windows Phone 7 (give them time with Nokia), it's a little rich for Microsoft to suggest Google is eventually going to do the same thing that Microsoft already did for music players.

  40. Re:Microsoft's Infighting & Corporate Schizoph by Sir_Sri · · Score: 1

    It's an odd market. Hence the caveat.

    Rich guy phones seem to have things like multi-sim options, world phones, maybe even satellite, tracking etc. And the expensive part is the special call centre which will find you the nearest 5 star anything and a chauffeur so you don't have to risk being exposed to people who make less than 500k/year.

  41. Re:Assholes by terjeber · · Score: 1

    Really? Microsoft has made your life bad? Seriously? Then you should go see a shrink. Seriously. Microsoft simply doesn't have the power to make my life miserable since they do not know me. Also, they do have, as is generally agreed, the very best developer tools out there. I like that part. Wish they did VS2010 for Java though, I hate when I have to go back to that terror that is Eclipse.

  42. Who cares? by Turmoyl · · Score: 1

    Seriously, who cares what anyone at Microsoft has to say about anything in the mobile world? They entered last, they're running dead last, and offer nothing new at all to the entirety of the mobile industry. In other words, they are far from being experts on anything in the mobile field, and should not be sought for comments on it.

    1. Re:Who cares? by moorster · · Score: 1

      Apparently you do. You're here reading this article and commenting, aren't you? Seems to me like you can't get enough of the micro stuff.

  43. Smartphone market dynamics by DragonWriter · · Score: 2

    First mover advantage. iPhone sales started 3 years before the first WP7 phone went on sale; Android phones went on sale 2 years before the first WP7 phone went on sale.

    Windows Phone 7 wasn't the first release of Microsoft's smartphone OS. Yeah, WP7 is newer than the iPhone, but the first smartphone-specific WinCE-based OS was Windows Smartphone 2002, which was 5 years before the iPhone. Now, Windows Smartphone 200x and Windows Mobile (after the PocketPC and Smartphone lines got a common branding) never were as popular as iPhone/iOS devices became as soon as the latter were available, but it has got nothing to do with "first mover" advantage, it has to do with customer perception of value, which Apple managed to generate where Microsoft hadn't (and still, for the most part, hasn't.)

    People aren't "demanding Android," they're saying "I really don't want to have to adjust to a whole new phone, buy a whole bunch of new apps, and set up a bunch of new stuff on my computer to manage things."

    That would explain a slowly degrading Android marketshare driven by upgrades with new users not particularly attracted to Android, it doesn't explain the reality of Android, and to a lesser extent iOS, continuing to have growing smartphone marketshare while RIM, Microsoft, and Symbian continue to lose ground. Those trends are explained by Android and iOS continuing to lead in the battle for customer-perceived value, not merely hanging on to users they already have because it is a pain to leave.

  44. Open Source Insurance by hhawk · · Score: 1

    In the bad old days of computing you needed to put code into escrow if you lic'd it to insure that you had access to it in the event of a bankruptcy or the company just closing down, etc. With commercial products that also release to an open source project like Android there isn't as great a need, perhaps no need.

    I think the bottom line here is that in the short, med and prob. long term it's not in Google's interests to play favorites and if they do Samsung and HTC (among others) have the resources to Fork Android continue on that path free from Google. They can do this at any time.. and I think that puts reasonable pressure on Google to behave

    In terms of MSFT and Mango and future releases one has to not only consider the quality of the OS but also the cost of any licensing fees as well as it's popularity in the market place, it's performance, etc. Then even if MS doesn't buy Nokia there is certainly a tight relationship there and MSFT can certainly play favorites perhaps more easily than Google can.

    --
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  45. Re:Assholes by losfromla · · Score: 1

    not really, not if you're doing say, bookkeeping, plumbing, computer support, or mail delivery and such.

    --
    Only I can judge you.
  46. Re:Assholes by lwriemen · · Score: 1

    Sure. The internet beats Windows hands down as an open platform and on economic and popularity terms. Java is more open for "make any software and sell it to anyone". Linux and OS/2 are more extensible than Windows. Windows' popularity is arguable due to their monopoly practices.

  47. Re:Assholes by lwriemen · · Score: 1

    Really? You're helping them to stay in business. I think it's more honest to admit you're part of the problem, but you don't care or you have no choice.

  48. Re:Assholes by Alex+Belits · · Score: 1

    Same applied to DOS (and DR-DOS).
    Same applied to DesqView.
    Same applied to CP-M.
    Same applied to *BSD.
    Same applied to OS/2.
    (everything above was on x86 PC)

    Same applied to each and every Unix, VMS and other operating systems from mid-80's and further.

    By the time Windows was released, open platform interface was the rule, not an exception.

    DOS was merely the first sufficiently open OS that was both endorsed by a very large hardware vendor, and designed for individual use -- CP-M is exactly the same minus "large hardware vendor" part, it ran on numerous cheap 8080 and Z80 personal computers (!) before it was ported to 8086. Yes, my little (or amnesiac) friends, it's true, personal computers that were both based around Intel processors and used DOS predecessors as its main OS, existed in 70's, long before IBM appropriated the term.

    --
    Contrary to the popular belief, there indeed is no God.
  49. Re:15th Aug 2011 - The real day Ballmer lost his j by moorster · · Score: 1

    You wish.

  50. Only part by DrYak · · Score: 1

    The base source code is available for OS X

    Only the (BSD-based) kernel and its microkernel are available.
    You can't take that code and compile a usable copy out of it. The whole userspace stuff (like even an user interface) is lacking.
    You need to combine it with GNUstep or Cocotron (and some GNU or BSD command line tools), before even getting close to be able to re-compile a couple of basic test-case software that work on Mac OS X or iOS.

    Note that just the base code for Android is available as well, not the high end goodness that really makes it shine.

    Nope. You're misinformed.
    The Linux kernel is available with a GPL license. Yes.
    But in addition to that, absolutely everything else, except for a few binary driver, is available with an Apache Public License. (Just not the latest version, for now. Google promised that Icecream will be released)
    That means that you can take the Android source and compile your very own full android stack. That's in fact what projects like Cyanogen are doing.

    The only thing you'll miss is a couple of proprietary binary apps that come packaged with your phone. Mostly Google Apps, or whatever your carrier installed instead (Bing, whatever else...)
    Cyanogen, for exemple, provide a separate download package which contains the default set of Google Apps.

    --
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