Microsoft is risking an $18 billion empire on Windows 8
Afrikupdate
Tech
By David Goldman
Tech
By David Goldman
Windows chief Steven Sinofsky spoke in Shanghai this week at
Microsoft's Windows 8 launch kickoff.
NEW YORK (CNNMoney) -- Windows has been Microsoft's most
reliable cash cow for nearly three decades. The software giant is gambling all
of that success on what it deems to be the company's future: a radically
redesigned Windows 8.
Windows is the linchpin of Microsoft's
empire. Without a significant design overhaul since 1995, the operating system
has been essentially printing money for Microsoft. Last year, Windows brought
in more than $18 billion in sales and $11.5 billion in profit. On its own,
Windows would be big enough to place among the largest 150 U.S. companies by
revenue, and its 62% profit margin would rank among the highest in the world.
But the Windows money tree is beginning to wilt.. PC sales are slumping. Windows revenue has
fallen for two straight years, and Microsoft is missing out on a rapidly
growing tablet market that has begun to eat away at traditional computer
demand. Just a few years ago, Windows ran about 90% of the world's
Internet-connected computing devices, according to Net Applications. Now, with
the rise of smartphones and tablets, Microsoft's share has fallen to about
two-thirds.
Apple (,AAPL,Fortune 500) alone has sold more than 100 million iPads
in just two and a half years. At an event held Tuesday unveiling a new line of
iPads, Apple CEO Tim Cook noted that his company shipped more iPads in the
second quarter of 2012 than any single PC manufacturer shipped PCs.
"This has gotten a lot of
attention," Cook quipped.
It sure has. Microsoft had two choices: Do
something radically different to win the future or risk a slow death by
cleaving to its past.
Microsoft picked the first option and
created Windows 8. The touch-based operating system works both as a desktop PC
and a tablet platform, and it's not hard to imagine Windows 8 running on a
dizzying array of other devices, including table tops, wall screens, kitchen
monitors and whatever new touchscreen gadgets we will be using in the future.
"This is an absolutely critical
product," said Bill Gates, Microsoft's chairman, on a company video blog. "It's key to where personal
computing is going."
Perhaps Microsoft's most radical change is opening up the
Windows platform to devices powered by ARM-based processors. About 95% of
tablets, smartphones and other mobile devices run on microchips designed by ARM (ARMH).
WitH Windows RT, the ARM-compatible cousin to the Intel-based Windows 8,
Microsoft gains access to a whole new array of mobile devices.
Industry analysts think users will be
startled and confused by the new software's starkly different look. Gestures,Titles,Charms
and Tickles replace many of the functions from the familiar Start menu -- which
is nowhere to be found in Windows 8. The operating system isn't difficult to
use, but it's got a learning curve.
"Microsoft is making appropriate,
significant changes to Windows, but it's going to be challenging for customers
to embrace it wholeheartedly," said Frank Gillett, an analyst at Forrester
Research.
As different as Windows 8 looks compared to
its predecessors, its guts got an even more severe overhaul. Windows 8 now
supports a new kind of tablet-like application software, and the only place
users can get those apps will be the Windows Store.
That's the wave of the future, embraced
early by Apple and Google and long ignored by Microsoft -- until now.
"Microsoft is responding to
competitive pressures that have made it rethink not only how its products
should look, but also how they should be architected," said Michael
Silver, analyst at Gartner. "Fundamentally, the application model that
worked well on the PC for so long needs to be changed for new classes of
devices and new types of usage models."
It could be a lucrative change. Apple and
Google each take a 30% cut off the top for each app sold on their devices.
Microsoft currently makes zilch. If Adobe (ADBE) opts to release a Photoshop app for
Windows 8 through the Windows Store, Microsoft would take home a percentage of
those lucrative sales.
Microsoft's financial success with Windows
going forward might well be measured in apps, as much or more than traditional
operating system sales. That's a radical break from how the company has
operated for decades.
Here's the catch: If Windows app
development doesn't skyrocket, Microsoft's master plan is at risk.
"Microsoft will fail if it cannot
convince developers to adopt Windows for future development quickly, especially
for consumer applications," Silver said. "Microsoft is already late.
It doesn't have a few more years." 

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