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Windows Phone Market Share Sinks Below 1 Percent (theverge.com)

Tom Warren, reporting for The Verge: Worldwide smartphone sales increased by nearly 4 percent in the recent quarter, but Microsoft's Windows Phone OS failed to capitalize on the growth and dropped below 1 percent market share. Gartner's latest smartphone sales report provides the latest proof of the obvious: Windows Phone is dead. Gartner estimates that nearly 2.4 million Windows Phones were sold in the latest quarter, around 0.7 percent market share overall. That's a decrease from the 2.5 percent market share of Windows Phone back in Q1 2015.

16 of 288 comments (clear)

  1. You mean Windows phones are rare as unicorns? by hey! · · Score: 5, Funny

    OK, now I want one.

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    Post may contain irony: discontinue use if experiencing mood swings, nausea or elevated blood pressure.
    1. Re:You mean Windows phones are rare as unicorns? by Opportunist · · Score: 4, Funny

      Watch. And then decide if you really want one.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    2. Re:You mean Windows phones are rare as unicorns? by JustAnotherOldGuy · · Score: 4, Informative

      Watch.

      What the fuck did I just watch??

      --
      Just cruising through this digital world at 33 1/3 rpm...
    3. Re:You mean Windows phones are rare as unicorns? by chr1st1anSoldier · · Score: 4, Informative

      As a current Windows Phone user, no you don't. I started on Windows Phone 7 and I'm still here in WP10, the experience has pretty much gone down hill. With the Exception of WP8.1, that was halfway decent. Everything else has just..... sucked. Microsoft hid the date applications were last updated in their app store because many of their apps have turned into abandon ware. Android and iOS are so far a head in features and functionality, I really do get envious when I pick up an iPhone or a mid to highend Android device.

  2. 2+ million does not seem like dead... by SuperKendall · · Score: 4, Informative

    I don't have a Windows phone, and don't know anyone that has one...

    But even though percentage wise the share is small, 2+ million phones in a quarter sure seems a fairly long way from dead, especially given Microsoft's motivation to maintain at least a foothold in mobile.

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
    1. Re:2+ million does not seem like dead... by jitterman · · Score: 5, Interesting

      I had a Nokia 920, then a 1520, both running Win Phone 8. For the state of things at the time, they were promising and, honestly, great. More stable than Android at the time (that's anecdotal, but my wife had an Android phone and it seemed to have more issues than my phone did), and was far more customizable than an unrooted iPhone (LiveTiles really is a great idea, IMO). Sadly, the combined hardware-software improvement that came in the move from Phone 7 to Phone 8 was a one-time event, apparently.

      As I waited in anticipation for what I hoped would be some ground-breaking software innovations in 10 and fun/useful hardware features to give them life, I was at first in denial, then dismayed, next angry, and finally in acceptance (the ecosystem is diseased, after all) that MS entirely dropped the ball and screwed it all up. I'm no fanboy, but I really did hope for a strong third alternative. Once it was clear that my 1520 wasn't going to physically survive the last time I dropped it, I moved to a Nexus 6P, and I've been very pleased with the experience six months in.

      So long, MS - it's your fault that you lost someone who was willing to be a loyal customer if you had shown some competence in the mobile area. I work in IT for a hospital, and can report there were four other people in the department who owned one a year ago, and don't today, so I'm willing to lay odds that you've lost not one, but five. I suspect that 2 million and change will continue to slip downward.

      --
      For conscience is the wound, and there's naught to staunch it
    2. Re:2+ million does not seem like dead... by StormReaver · · Score: 5, Funny

      Maybe this will be the year of Windows on mobile.

    3. Re:2+ million does not seem like dead... by LWATCDR · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I had a windows phone for a while and it really was not bad.
      I had a super cheap Lumia and it was still a good device. The OS was also really good.and was very responsive.
      The problem that WindowsPhone had for me is the same problem that Linux on the desktop and OS/X has.
      I could not get the applications I wanted to use on the platform.
      People are not going to write apps until you have enough users. You will not have a lot of users until you have the apps.
      The lack of Google apps for Windows phone was a real issue for me.
      If you look at how it breaks down it is really interesting IMHO.
      1. IOS has all the Apple, Google, and Microsoft apps.
      2. Android has all the Google and Microsoft apps.
      3. WindowsPhone has the Microsoft apps.
      Frankly I think it is a real shame because Windows Phone is a good OS and the Lumia phones are good hardware. If Microsoft can help Intel get x86 mobile SOCs on the market or get developers to compile Windows Desktop Apps for ARM, or Microsoft can create a really good X86 to ARM JIT then the unified OS project might really pay off.

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    4. Re:2+ million does not seem like dead... by DarkOx · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Right but where ecosystems are concerned its really all about the size of the pie slice.

      If the ecosystem is highly fractured and you are a developer you will want to write the most cross platform-least-common-denominator thing you can so that you have a broad enough customer base to make it worth the time.

      When the ecosystem gets a down to a few players you start doing a version for each. When one of the "big three" is only a percentage or so, well you have enough revenue for the next big two that your probably just ignore that part of the market. Its a death spiral situation, from there on out. Application developers stop supplying for the also ran people quite buying them, the market segment gets smaller still, more devs end support/supply....

      --
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  3. Re:Ass-rape by The+Grim+Reefer · · Score: 5, Funny

    I'd rather be ass-raped with a dildo covered in fish hooks than use Windows on my phone.

    I admire your resolve. But given a choice between the two, Windows phone sounds pretty good to me.

  4. Turned Win7 into Win 8 for 1% by TheMadTopher · · Score: 5, Interesting

    You turned your flagship OS into the worst interface so you'd have UI compatibility for that 1% of the phone market. Good job MS.

  5. Re:YO by Austerity+Empowers · · Score: 4, Funny

    No problem, I just threw it across the room. It was very mobile for a few seconds, then it crashed. Windows Mobile died as it lived.

  6. Re:3rd Party Developers by T.E.D. · · Score: 4, Insightful

    No, that's the biggest symptom. But Android was new once too. It got past that because it was the most open platform available. Open is better for developers because the barriers to entry are lower. Open is better for buyers because all the competition keeps their prices lower.

    The biggest problem with Windows Phone is that they are trying to fight an established competitor with no new genre-busting capabilities and a less Open product.

  7. Re:Ass-rape by drinkypoo · · Score: 4, Funny

    I'd rather be ass-raped with a dildo covered in fish hooks than use Windows on my phone.

    I admire your resolve. But given a choice between the two, Windows phone sounds pretty good to me.

    the dildo won't send your credit card info to hackers

    you can cancel your credit card. if you cancel your asshole you have to shit in a bag

    --
    "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
  8. Microsoft, do this: by emil · · Score: 5, Interesting

    We know that the NT kernel developed by Dave Cutler has a POSIX emulation layer. This kernel runs the Windows app store, and it's perfectly capable of running Dalivk/ART in a variety of configurations - it does so already with Bluestacks and Google's emulators.

    Take the NT kernel, and use it to replace Linux, leaving the Android userland as intact as possible.

    To this "windroid," add the required javascript execution layers to allow the Windows app store to run on the same platform.

    (Re)implement all of the extensions for Dalvik that are provided by Google services.

    Reissue Windows phone as a unified Dalvik/Javascript mobile app platform, allowing Play apps to seamlessly move to the Windows store. Maintain enough control over the platform to provide security patches, and "windroid" could fix many update problems that Google seems incapable of addressing.

    The NT kernel exists because it was able to mimic ms-dos. It could do so again with Linux.

  9. Re:Get rid of iPhones, too by amiga3D · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I had a flip phone for a long time. A simple tracphone that was indestructable. I still have it in a drawer but sadly I was seduced by a quadcore arm processor with a 1080p screen and 4g LTE data. I stuck a 64gb card in it and I have endless entertainment everywhere I go. I can sit for hours now in a hospital emergency waiting room and never be bored. Fuck, I hardly ever call anyone, it's a portable computer that makes calls occasionally.