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Windows Phone 8: What's the Impact?

Windows Phone 8: What
June 21, 2012 11:25AM

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The transition to Windows Phone 8 will be "short-term pain for long-term gain" for both Nokia and Microsoft, said analyst Avi Greengart. "It's not like the Lumia line has been setting the world on fire," he noted, adding that it's in Nokia's long-term interest to have a better application ecosystem for Windows Phone 8,

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Following Microsoft Relevant Products/Services's preview of Windows Phone 8 on Wednesday, the potential impact of this major new component in the company's overall platform strategy is still being assessed.

Key issues include the ecosystem for third-party apps Relevant Products/Services, the effect on the company's alliance with Nokia, and the meshing of Windows Phone 8 with the coming Windows 8 OS for tablets, laptops and desktops.

The new Phone 8, expected to launch in the fall, will only run on new devices. This means that it will not run on Nokia's current lineup of Windows Phone 7-based Lumia devices, whose sales had been seen as key indicators of whether the phone maker's decision to abandon Symbian for Microsoft's phone platform was a good idea.

Nokia, Windows 8

Nokia says it will try to offer some of the new features that will be available in Windows Phone 8 to Lumia users, including a better camera, a tile-based interface that resembles Phone 8, and Zynga games.

But many industry observers expect that Nokia's sales of the Lumia could stall, as prospective buyers wait for the new Phone 8 devices to come out. Already, Nokia is showing the costs of its transition. Its revenue for the first quarter of this year plummeted 52 percent year-over-year, and its global market share fell from 25 percent to about 20 percent over the last year. Samsung is now the world's largest handset maker, replacing Nokia in that position.

Current Analysis' Avi Greengart described the transition to Windows Phone 8 as "short-term pain for long-term gain" for both Nokia and Microsoft. "It's not like the Lumia line has been setting the world on fire," he noted, adding that it's in Nokia's long-term interest to have a better application ecosystem.

Greengart pointed out that, as expected, Phone 8 appears to be "a stripped down version of the full Windows 8," which brings various "PC Relevant Products/Services benefits" to those phones, such as support for DirectX.

'Enormously Risky Move'

The kinship to Windows 8 also points to a better ecosystem for application development, Greengart said, because third-party developers will be able to code their apps and then compile them for either a phone, a tablet Relevant Products/Services, or a laptop Relevant Products/Services -- with adjustments made for screen size and interface. "The code base can remain the same for the different devices," he said, "because it's one platform."

For businesses, he said, this could mean a large retailer develops an e-commerce solution that utilizes the same programming across the range of computing and communication devices. Greengart added that this could result in the creation of a variety of multiple-device apps that simply do not have counterparts on either Apple's iOS or Google's Android Relevant Products/Services platforms.

But this "enormously risky move" to the new platform by Microsoft, he added, doesn't mean that consumers and businesses will buy Phone 8 devices. Greengart pointed to the very real possibility that potential buyers will "see this as yet another shift by Microsoft," which had been pushing Windows Phone 7 and Windows 7. Consumers and businesses may just throw up their hands, he said, "and choose to move to Apple or Android."

Tell Us What You Think
Comment:

Name:

Carlo Broglia:

Posted: 2012-06-23 @ 3:32pm PT
Microsoft has some great products. Windows 7, Visual Studio, xBox, Office 365.

But never really understood phones.

WP6 has never sold much, WP7 even less despite Nokia.
Other examples: Kin; and Ballmer laughing off the iPhone "because nobody would spend 500$ for a phone".

But let's see in 6 months, maybe WP8 is that good

Kenneth:

Posted: 2012-06-22 @ 6:32am PT
So because Microsoft elects to do something new and innovative, potential buyers would rather jump to something TOTALLY all together different? That really sounds logical doesnt it? (LOL)

Um:

Posted: 2012-06-21 @ 11:45am PT
Microsoft has defined every technological advance society has seen for over a decade. Without Windows, all of those advances could not and would not have taken place at the pace they have. The world owes MS way more than the world thinks its somehow entitled to. Who would "throw up there hands" and switch to Apple and Android now? Apple is overpriced and frankly not exclusive or elite anymore (albeit with good UI) and Android is just what you get when a company makes its money from ad dollars and not unit sales: buggy and innefficient. It even struggles to have a true identity. Nah, I like where MS is going. Smart smart smart

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