What I find most interesting about Windows 10 is that if
Apple wanted to knock Microsoft off the desktop, then it -- not Microsoft --
should have released a product like this. When I say "like this," I
mean one that could transform a smartphone into a PC.
My reasoning is that Microsoft is relatively weak in smartphones, and Apple
currently is kicking Google all over the market. Given Google's power, that's
pretty impressive -- of course, it is also largely Google's own fault.
Granted, Apple would have to lead with iOS, not OS X, but given Apple's massive mobile power, the result could be devastating. However, Apple won't go that route, because it effectively would eliminate its PC sales, and it wants both revenue streams. That gives Microsoft a unique lever if -- and this is a big if -- it can figure out a way to use it.
I'll focus on that this week and end with my product of the week: a new very low-cost video conferencing system from AVer.
Granted, Apple would have to lead with iOS, not OS X, but given Apple's massive mobile power, the result could be devastating. However, Apple won't go that route, because it effectively would eliminate its PC sales, and it wants both revenue streams. That gives Microsoft a unique lever if -- and this is a big if -- it can figure out a way to use it.
I'll focus on that this week and end with my product of the week: a new very low-cost video conferencing system from AVer.
The
Windows 10 Lever
There are undoubtedly a few million
more people on Windows 10 this week than there were last week, thanks to the
launch of the product. There is some breakage in the upgrade, but given the
massive number of folks who made this move, it has been unusually light.
The most powerful part of this
product isn't the UI fix, the various features, or the product's speed and
security. It is the fact it runs on both tablets and PCs and will run on
smartphones.
What this means is that at some
point -- and this was demonstrated -- you could build a smartphone that
effectively could become a PC. All you'd have to do is add a keyboard, mouse
and monitor.
Tied to a back-end service like
Frame or Dell Cloud Connect (both based on Nvidia Grid) you could have a
solution that neither Apple nor Google could match: a secure, fully featured
desktop client -- with power that would scale from simple tasks to full-on
workstation performance -- that would fit in your pocket.
Think how wonderful that would be.
Your smartphone becomes your PC, and it effectively morphs based on what you
attach to it. Granted, it would mean rethinking laptops as more portable
keyboards/trackpads/screens than PCs, but the end result could enable a massive
transformation in the market, which would take the multiple products we now
carry and turn them into one product that we'd accessorize.
If Microsoft were to bring that to
fruition, it would render PCs and smartphones as we know them obsolete -- and
that potentially would provide a path back to dominance and relevance.
Apple
Is Better Positioned
However, this strategy moves up from
smartphones, not down from PCs. I'm not envisioning taking a PC and turning it
into a smartphone, but rather turning a smartphone into a PC, and that means it
would be best to start with a strong position in smartphones. That is what
Apple has and Microsoft lacks, which means that if Apple were to do the same
thing with iOS, it could displace Microsoft more easily than Microsoft could
displace Apple. But it won't.
That's because Apple's model is
based on customers buying a lot of products from Apple -- not just one -- and
as a result, it will be unwilling to abandon OS X in favor of iOS for fear of
losing all or most of its PC revenue. There clearly would be an offset for new
accessories, but Apple isn't thinking about collapsing its product line.
It is working on increasing it, and
the Apple Watch implementation is an example. It could have been a phone
replacement product -- but instead it's an accessory, so you need to buy the
watch and the phone.
So, while Apple could execute a very
similar strategy and do more damage to Microsoft than Microsoft initially could
do to Apple -- it won't.
Why
Not Google?
Oh, and while Google could do this
as well, the father of Chrome OS is running its operating system business. He'd
have to replace Chrome OS with Android -- and no one gives up his own product
that easily.
So, Google is out of this chase as
well. The company has been considering a converged OS platform -- but Android
is already in trouble. If a pivot to a new OS were executed badly, it could
knock Google out of the market. Developers have been complaining that they
haven't been making money on Android for some time, suggesting that many might
not spend the money to migrate their products to a new OS.
So, even though Google could do
this, its developer foundation may not be solid enough to make the pivot it
would have to make. Also, the pivot it should make -- off Android -- is distasteful.
Android is under a bit of an ugly
cloud at the moment. Most of the firms I work with appear to be losing money on
the platform, and its security issues are legion, providing an unprecedented
opportunity for both Apple and Microsoft (not to mention BlackBerry).
Microsoft's
Reverse Pivot
So, Microsoft, rather than using the
smartphone to take over PCs, is on the more difficult path of using the PC to
take over the smartphone. The best way to do this would be to partner with
Intel again to make the move, given that Intel also is spending a fortune to
penetrate the smartphone segment. With their combined resources, the firms
could fund a massive effort.
There has been an historic feud
going on between Intel and Microsoft. However, with the replacement of both
CEOs, there now is a great opportunity for them to come together, much like
they did when the PC was born, to once again redefine personal computing as
mostly mobile. (Well, the market kind of already did that, but I mean on Intel
and Microsoft technology -- not on ARM and Apple tech).
Windows 10 is the best shot
Microsoft has had this decade to take tech market momentum back from Apple.
Wrapping
Up
Microsoft's strategy of using its PC
position to attack smartphones is a good one; it's just that both Apple and
Google are in better positions to pull off the opposite. Both are stronger on
the target smartphone platform today -- although Google's strength is falling
like a rock at the moment.
This battle likely will be defined
more by what these vendors choose not to do than what they choose to do.
Microsoft will have to push smartphones harder than it ever has and get
powerful help from someone like Intel to pull it off -- and it might not.
Apple would have to accept the
cannibalization of Macs by iPhones, and it really won't want to do that.
Google would have to fix its
developer problems or pivot off Android, not the Chrome OS, and it likely won't
do that either.
In the end, the future most likely
will belong to the company with the balls to take the big risk (or the one that
is already dominant). Google, not Apple, is the most at risk. The next few
years should be really interesting.
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