Friends don't let friends use Microsoft software!
I am sure the folks at Microsnot are perfectly capable of producing bug free software. But the problem is that the culture at Microsoft rewards people for producing software that is riddled with bugs as long as it is released on time. Nokia to Use Microsoft Software in Smartphones By KEVIN J. O'BRIEN Published: February 11, 2011 LONDON — Nokia, the struggling world leader in mobile phones, said Friday that it would discard its own cellphone operating system in favor of software made by Microsoft, in an alliance of market leaders designed to shore up their halting efforts in smartphones. The announcement by Stephen Elop, the former Microsoft executive hired by Nokia in September as the company’s first non-Finnish chief executive, was a dramatic admission of failure by Nokia, the proud world leader in handsets that helped define the mobile age in its infancy. At the same time, the alliance, made before a Nokia investors’ conference in London, is a bold gamble, perhaps a last-ditch effort for both Nokia and Microsoft, which dominates the desktop and laptop software market, to gain a lasting foothold in the booming smartphone business. Mobile devices like smartphones are expected to surpass desktop and laptop computers this year as the main way to gain access to the Internet, a seismic change that is rewriting the rules for software makers and the Web businesses that depend on Internet contact. “Nokia is at a critical juncture, where significant change is necessary and inevitable in our journey forward,” Mr. Elop, a Canadian who led Microsoft’s business software division before moving to Nokia, said in a statement. “Today, we are accelerating that change through a new path, aimed at regaining our smartphone leadership, reinforcing our mobile device platform and realizing our investments in the future.” Mr. Elop described the relationship with Microsoft as a broad strategic alliance that would extend beyond using Microsoft Phone software on Nokia smartphones. Nokia’s mapping software, Nokia Maps, will also be used in the Microsoft Bing search engine, Mr. Elop said. Nokia’s Ovi software services business, a major effort by the company to match Apple, will disappear and become part of Microsoft’s Marketplace application and services platform. Nokia’s one-year collaboration with the chip maker Intel, called MeeGo, to produce a new generation of Nokia smartphones, will become a long-term open-source project designed to develop new kinds of devices, Mr. Elop said. The collaboration failed to produce a cellphone in its first year. Mr. Elop said Nokia planned to introduce a MeeGo model this year. In a related development, Mr. Elop announced the departure of Alberto Torres, a Nokia board member and the executive vice president responsible for MeeGo. He also elevated Jerri DeVard, an American former manager at Verizon and Microsoft, to the executive board. Mr. Elop had hired Ms. DeVard last month as the new chief marketing officer of Nokia. In his remarks, the new Nokia chief executive made it clear that the future for Nokia lay with Microsoft. Symbian, Nokia’s own operating system, which has been largely blamed for the company’s declining market share, will continue as Nokia services the 200 million Symbian cellphones in use around the world. Mr. Elop said that Symbian would become a franchise business and that Nokia expected to sell another 150 million mobile phones before halting development. One analyst said the radical changes, while risky, were long overdue. But Microsoft, which has a share of only 2 percent of the global market for handset operating systems, may reap the bigger benefits. “It’s a big win for Microsoft today,” said the analyst, Pete Cunningham, with Canalys, a research firm in Reading, England. “Windows Phone 7 is no one’s priority. But now Microsoft has a leading vendor committed to use the platform. For Nokia, the big question is how quickly can the company execute on this. That has been one of the major issues.” Nokia’s share of the global handset market, once more than 50 percent, is now falling rapidly as its rivals close in. According to Gartner, a research firm, Nokia’s global share fell to 29 percent in 2010 from 36 percent a year earlier as Apple and Research in Motion, the maker of BlackBerry, both posted gains. The Microsoft chief executive, Steven A. Ballmer, was expected to join Mr. Elop at the conference for investors later Friday. |