Microsoft Ready To Show New Mobile Windows OS
Beyond improvements to the interface, however, Microsoft's new mobile OS needs to be optimized for mobility, according to Lisa Pierce, an independent wireless analyst at the Strategic Networks Group.
"Frankly, there seems to be an underlying assumption on the part of Microsoft that people want to do exactly what they want to do on a PC, but in a smaller form factor," Pierce said. "But this is not necessarily the case."
There are certain standard PC apps that make perfect sense for deployment on mobile devices, Pierce observed. "But then there are the ones that frankly are not going to work very well without an entirely different type of display," she said, citing spreadsheets as an example.
Microsoft's share of the mobile OS market was just nine percent at the end of last year's second quarter, according to Gartner Research. And given that Windows Mobile 6.5 only became available in October, it was too late to have an impact on the third quarter, so sales of Windows-based smartphones saw another decline to 7.9 percent, Gartner analysts said.
By contrast, Nokia (44.6 percent), Research In Motion (20.8 percent) and Apple (17.1 percent) all grew their market shares in the third quarter. Though Android only held a two percent market share at the end of June, the Google-backed platform picked up momentum and rose to 3.5 percent in the third quarter after the launch of several new phones, but still lagged behind the 4.7...