Originally posted by DanS
I have been quite impressed with MS lately. They are choosing their shots and most of the initiatives you mention are right down their alley--software and operating systems.
*X-Box is a better console than Sony's and MS should win out in this market in the 4-6 year timeframe -- Asian low-cost, outsourced manufacturing base, American hardware and software IP, by and large
I have been quite impressed with MS lately. They are choosing their shots and most of the initiatives you mention are right down their alley--software and operating systems.
*X-Box is a better console than Sony's and MS should win out in this market in the 4-6 year timeframe -- Asian low-cost, outsourced manufacturing base, American hardware and software IP, by and large
The introduction to the company on www.microsoft.com is full of references to software and X-Box just doesn't fit in that.
Besides, X-Box may be technically superior but remember this thing isn't supposed to be an engineer's wet dream. (lots of similar projects crashed on the misconception that technical superiority suffices) It's the marketing side that makes the difference in consumer electronics, and Sony has tremendous experience at this field.
Not even mentioning the fact that Sony actually makes a profit out of consoles while MS apparently doesn't. (I don't believe MS released profit figures on the X-Box but the company reportedly only makes a profit out of Windows and Office)
*MS has chosen an excellent way of selling their OS for handsets. Not that creating generic reference designs is a new concept, but it should work extremely well in the current commodity manufacturing environment; MS should have a sizeable slice of this market in the 3-5 year timeframe, if they execute, and the Taiwanese contract manufacturers will be rich because of it -- Lowest cost manufacturing base, American hardware and software IP
MS allows to alter the userface, Symbian allows to alter the source code as well. Not so long ago MS suffered a large symbolic defeat when Sendo, a British handset producer switched from MS to Symbian, exactly because it couldn't get access to the source code.
And if Nokia should have taught you anything, it is that handset are fashion products as well as just a tool to call people with. Branding and slick design matters and the established manufacturers, as in the case of Sony, are very skilled at this. Next to that does a company like Nokia posses large scale of economies and a very efficient logistics system.
MS strategy of circumventing the established handset producers might work in the lower end of the market where the fashion aspect isn't much of an issue, but MS still lacks scale of economies to get a decent profit margin out of it.
One of the only areas where I'm skeptical where they're heading is MSN dial-up and broadband. The US market is mature for dial up; broadband is too expensive to hit mass appeal. Don't know where they're going to get big numbers.
But I'm not at all concerned with imperial overstretch, as long as they keep to their core competency. Don't know too much about the SAP angle. Perhaps you could enlighten?
Can they effectively fight Nokia on one front, Sony on another, and Linux on a third one, whilst being distracted by litigation?
MS bought Great Plains vendor of enterprise software a year ago. SAP was also designing enterprise portals which has the potential to replace the Windows desktop.
Next to that MS had plans to design enterprise portals itself.
That created discussion about SAP and MS heading for a battle but I haven't heard much of it since actually.
Its financials are stunning.
Comment