Microsoft draws on Zune for new phone software

Posted Feb. 15, 2010 at 8:09 a.m.

Associated Press | Microsoft Corp. is unveiling new mobile phone software that works a lot like its own Zune media player.

The new software, which was due to be unveiled at the Mobile World
Congress, is a dramatic change from previous generations of Windows
Mobile. But Microsoft is sticking to its model of making the software
and selling it to phone manufacturers, rather than making its own
phones.


Microsoft’s mobile system powered 13.1 percent of smart phones sold in the U.S. last year, according to research firm In-Stat. That made it No. 3 after Research In Motion Ltd.’s BlackBerry and the iPhone. But Microsoft has been losing market share while Apple and Google Inc.’s Android gained.

All the while, the market is becoming increasingly important. People are spending more and more time on their phones, and the devices steer people to potentially lucrative Web services and ads.

Phones with the new software will be on the market by the holidays, Microsoft said. They won’t be called “Zune phones,” as had been speculated, but will keep the “Windows phone” branding.

Andy Lees, senior vice president of Microsoft’s mobile communications business, said Windows Mobile suffered from the company’s chaotic approach to the market. The software maker gave phone hardware makers and wireless carriers so much freedom to alter the system and install it on so many different devices that none worked the same way.

As a result, while other phone vendors such as Apple linked their hardware and software tightly to ensure a better experience, Windows Mobile might not have looked like it quite fit on a certain handset.

“We were too flexible, at the expense of end-user focus,” said Joe Belfiore, a corporate vice president in the Windows phone group.

With this version, Microsoft is imposing a set of required features for Windows phones. Microsoft will make manufacturers have permanent buttons on the phone for “home,” ‘’search” and “back”; a high-resolution screen with the same touch-sensing technology as the iPhone; and a 5-megapixel camera and flash on the back of the device. Hardware QWERTY keyboards will be optional.

A test device from Asus, which Microsoft used to demonstrate the new phone software for The Associated Press in Redmond, Wash., also had a front camera and a speaker.

The iPhone’s success has spurred lots of look-alike phones with screenfuls of tiny square icons representing each program. Just as it did with the Zune, Microsoft has tried to avoid an icon-intensive copy of that setup. Instead, it relies more on clickable words and images pulled from the content itself. For example, if you put a weather program on the device’s home page, it shows a constantly updated snapshot of conditions where you are, rather than a static icon that you have to click in order to see the weather.

At first glance, the navigation seems a bit more complex than on the iPhone or BlackBerry. Windows Mobile and the Zune have an unusual navigational flow: users have to scroll both vertically and sideways to find common functions.

Most of the built-in applications complement or connect with existing Microsoft programs or services, such as the Bing search engine. The games “hub” connects to an Xbox Live account and lets players pick up where they left off with multiplayer games. Microsoft also turns to the Zune programming for the phones’ entertainment hub, much in the way the iPhone’s music library is called iPod. And when users plug the phone into a PC, the Zune software pops up to manage music, movies and podcasts.

About 18 months ago, Microsoft stopped most improvements to its existing smart-phone operating software and started from scratch on Windows Phone OS 7.0. Belfiore, a 20-year Microsoft veteran, came from the Zune team to lead the design.

Microsoft “is resolved at a company level to be successful in mobile,” Lees said. He indicated Microsoft is willing to spend hundreds of millions of dollars on marketing to ensure it’s successful.

 

16 comments:

  1. laffabout Feb. 15, 2010 at 10:27 a.m.

    Its still not better than the iPhone /somedouche

  2. Liz Feb. 15, 2010 at 10:40 a.m.

    Zune has been as big a disaster as Windows Vista, and now Microsoft wants to continue with this mistake? I just wish Microsoft would focus on making a decent operating system first. As a Microsoft stock holder and Windows user at work, this should be the first priority. I will admit, Windows 7 is an improvement, but still is not close to the ease, stability and speed of rival Mac OS X (what we use at home). My Zune sits in a closet with my Vista laptop, and except for the sometimes spotty AT&T service, the iPhone is amazing.

  3. joe greenberg Feb. 15, 2010 at 11:00 a.m.

    Finally a Zune Phone… the Zune rocks, has rocked, and will rock in the future! Now Microsoft needs to get the right partners on board with this so we can jam out tunes without being tied down to iGarbage.

  4. Matt Feb. 15, 2010 at 11:43 a.m.

    The Zune hardware is great. Its the desktop software which absolutely KILLS it.

  5. jeff s Feb. 15, 2010 at 12:29 pm

    wait!!! I heard Steven Jobs is putting slick white plastic on a manure… let me run out and buy it! Then 4 months later a slimmer smaller manure box.

  6. Limbo Feb. 15, 2010 at 12:57 pm

    Zune is trash and another “Macromistake” by Microsoft. Kind of the Edsel of electronics and a laughingstock piece of (yawn) wannabe hardware. I knew it was doomed when the introductory color was the color of feces (was a Christmas gift that caused tremendous amusement after opening it). Anyway, can’t blame them for trying and attempting to copy yet another success from Apple. I agree with others: Microsoft should focus on fixing Windows first.

  7. MfS Feb. 15, 2010 at 4:02 pm

    LOL! Obviously Jeff S hasn’t used an Apple product for more than 15 minutes, let alone an iPhone…or, because he can’t have “total control over every inch of the Apple product” it’s labeled as crap.
    I always get a kick out of these types. The same people who cry “Apple Tax!” and “Macs/Apple products are overpriced!” Usually these people have never ever tried an Apple product for more than a few minutes or don’t have the patience to learn how to use one, so therefore they’re overpriced garbage. Coming from someone who uses both Macs and PCs every day, and an iPhone, I’m interested to see what this new phone looks like. I hope it’s great. Strong competition will only make the iPhone & other mobile phones better next time around.

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  14. computer freezes March 3, 2010 at 7:50 a.m.

    Its about time that Microsoft gets down to business and tries to make a better effort at their phone software.

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