By Sascha Segan of PC Mag.
Windows 7 might as well be Vista when it comes to interacting with
mobile devices. Microsoft's total mangling of this mobile opportunity
reveals a number of major flaws that the company must address if it's
going to continue to dominate the OS world.
Microsoft must embrace the mobile space if it wants to get its act
together. The company has a bunch of semi-independent units that don't
seem to talk to each other very much: Windows, Windows Mobile, Xbox,
Zune, and whatever has grown out of their acquisition of the Danger/
Sidekick team. As Apple has shown, you create compelling experiences
by acting as one company, not as five. Unfortunately, it looks like
Microsoft still isn't talking to Microsoft.
The silo situation was likely born during the bad old antitrust days,
when Microsoft had to avoid looking like a monopolist. But now that
Microsoft doesn't have a monopoly on anything, it just looks like a
mixture of confusion and incompetence.
Too Many Microsofts
One of Microsoft's fatal flaws is that it thinks in products, not in
ecosystems. It builds a lot of attractive pieces, but it doesn't snap
together the puzzle. For instance: what's up with the Danger/Sidekick
thing, anyway? They bought Danger way back in February, 2008. Rather
than folding that expertise into Windows Mobile, they shunted the team
off into a mysterious "Premium Mobile Experiences" group that has so
far produced nothing except a horrifying server crash. The latest
we've heard is that something might happen next year. In any case, PMX
seems to be competing with—rather than enhancing—the work of the
Windows Mobile group.
Windows Mobile and the Zune have incompatible app stores. The Zune
doesn't automatically work with Windows 7's default media player. At
least the Xbox works as a Media Center Extender. Once again, we've
heard that better integration between units may happen with Windows
Mobile 7, which is coming out…someday.
Having an ecosystem doesn't mean not having partners. You don't have
to be Apple and make your own hardware. You just have to make
integration between teams a priority. Windows 7 misses an integration
opportunity by appearing to abandon Windows Mobile, and it misses a
market opportunity by not syncing with the billions of other mobile
devices out there.
An Empty Device Stage
Most mobile platforms are now moving towards cloud-based syncing
solutions. That's fine for a lot of things, such as e-mail and
contacts. But large files like video, photos, and music still work
best over a local connection, and local syncing is still relevant for
folks who can't—or won't—rely on the cloud for all of their data (such
as, say, once-burned Sidekick users).
Smartphones typically require heavy, clunky, proprietary software to
sync—and I'm including iTunes for Windows in that list. Feature phones
either don't sync at all or use extremely clumsy options. Apple tried
to provide an easy syncing path with iSync, but it doesn't support
most of the phones Americans own.
Windows 7's approach to mobile devices is something called "Device
Stage," which looks fine on paper; it's a set of XML-based spec sheets
that are like device drivers, but are much, much easier to write. The
problem is that nobody supports Device Stage. Microsoft shunted off
our questions about this by saying that it's up to phone manufacturers
to adopt their new platform.
But I can't see partners giving a lot of love to Device Stage
considering that Microsoft doesn't even support it themselves.
Microsoft controls two mobile OSes: Windows Mobile 6 and their Danger/
Sidekick platform. Neither works with Device Stage. I'm not convinced
the Windows Mobile people and the Windows 7 people have even had a
conversation about Device Stage.
We've seen the whole "we'll put hooks in, you use them" thing before.
Remember Windows Vista Sideshow? That was supposed to let mobile
devices act as remote controls and as information windows into Vista
PCs. Never happened.
The smartphone market is booming, and Microsoft isn't doing too well
in that space right now. Windows Mobile 6.5 is basically a
placeholder, an interim update to a painfully ancient OS that's being
left in the dust by Google and Apple. A strong link between the well-
reviewed Windows 7 and the somewhat-creaky Windows Mobile 6.5—or
between Windows 7 and mobile devices in general—could have given
Microsoft some juice, given Apple some pause, and pushed the state of
the art forward. Instead, Microsoft has missed yet another mobile
opportunity with Windows 7.