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Microsoft and the launch of Windows 8 - Tablets from on high

Microsoft makes its pitch for the mobile age

Oct 27th 2012 | from the print edition

IT TRULY is a new era at Microsoft, gushed Steve Ballmer, the giant software

company s boss, in a letter to shareholders this month. For once, such

grandiloquence seems justified. On October 26th Windows 8, the newest version

of Microsoft s operating system for personal computers, is due to be released.

It looks very different from past editions; it is designed for touchscreens on

both PCs and tablets; and it can run on processors designed by ARM, a British

company whose allies dominate mobile devices, as well as chips made by Intel,

Microsoft s long-term partner. Also on sale will be the Surface, a

tablet-cum-PC bearing Microsoft s own brand. A version of Windows 8 for

smartphones is due on October 29th.

Whether the new era will be a successful one is an open question. It got off to

a stumbling start when the European Commission warned Microsoft not to repeat

the sin of steering users away from rivals to its Explorer browser. (The

company insisted all would be well before the launch.)

What is not in doubt is how much is at stake for Microsoft. To see that, look

at the chart. In its past financial year its Windows division accounted for

about a quarter of its revenue of $73.7 billion; three-quarters of that came

from sales of Windows to PC-makers for installation on new desk- and laptops.

Windows is the dominant system on such devices, with more than 90% of the

market despite the growing popularity of Apple s Macs. But that market has

slowed. In the year to the third quarter, shipments of PCs fell by 8.6%,

according to IDC, a research firm. However, the drop largely reflected a

clear-out of stocks by PC-sellers before Windows 8 s arrival as well as the

ropiness of the world economy.

People are doing more and more computing on the go, using tablets and

smartphones. Apple rules the tablet market, although devices powered by Google

s Android operating system have been taking a bigger share. On October 23rd

Apple unveiled the fourth incarnation of the iPad as well as a smaller version

with a screen less than eight inches (20cm) across; Google and Amazon had

already launched much cheaper seven-inch tablets. In smartphones, Android

devices account for most of the volume; Apple s iPhone scoops most of the

profit. Windows has a tiny share of smartphones; in tablets it is invisible. If

you lump these in with PCs, says Frank Gillett of Forrester, another research

company, Microsoft s share of personal-computing devices drops to only 30%.

Microsoft s plan has several parts, starting with the transformation of Windows

into a system for touchscreens. Tiles replace the icons that have cluttered

screens since Windows 95 appeared 17 years ago. Tiles can represent pretty much

anything you like, from applications to photos of loved ones. They are also

live , showing new information as it comes in. Xbox, Microsoft s games and

home-entertainment hub, and existing Windows phones already have this look.

Complementarity between devices goes beyond appearances. Using Microsoft s

cloud services, owners of Windows 8 devices will be able to start doing

something on one machine (working in the office, say) and continue on another

(finishing a document on the road). They will also be able to play Xbox s

music, video and games. In effect, says Jos Pi ero of Microsoft s

entertainment and devices division, this stretches Xbox s reach from the 67m

consoles sold so far to hundreds of millions of devices. Through an app

called SmartGlass, tablets and phones can become adjuncts to Xboxes in the

home, showing information about a film playing on the screen in the living

room.

This distinguishes Microsoft from Apple. Apple s desk- and laptops, on the one

hand, and its iPhones and iPads on the other, have different operating systems

and appearances. Microsoft is also more generous than Apple to its army of

developers, on whom it must rely to fill the Windows Store, the online shop for

Windows 8 apps. Apple (like Google) snaffles 30% of all revenue from its store.

Microsoft will take 30% only of the first $25,000 and 20% on the rest.

Developers may also take payment outside the shop, cutting Microsoft out.

At the same time, Microsoft is taking a leaf out of Apple s book, by making and

selling its own devices. Hitherto, it has supplied the operating system; others

have made the PCs. Although lots of devices will be on offer, the Surface, says

Tami Reller, the chief financial officer of the Windows division, is the

perfect stage for Windows 8 . The most basic version costs $499, the same as

the cheapest full-sized new iPad; another $100 buys a cover containing a

keyboard. At least at first, the Surface will be sold only online or through

Microsoft s own bricks-and-mortar shops.

Mark Moerdler of Sanford C. Bernstein, a research firm, says that although

Windows 8 may sell on PCs it is a tablet operating system first and foremost .

Unlike Apple s and Google s systems, he says, it has been designed to allow

people to create content as well as to consume it. Being able to use Microsoft

s popular Office suite of Word (document), Excel (spreadsheet) and PowerPoint

(slide) software on a tablet designed for the purpose should give Windows 8 an

edge over its competitors. A version will be installed on devices that run

Windows RT, the cheaper, less powerful, ARM-based flavour of Windows 8, such as

the first Surfaces. Microsoft does not make Office for the iPad.

Microsoft says advance sales have been brisk: at $800m by the end of September,

they were 40% higher than for Windows 7 before its launch in 2009. Even so,

there are obstacles. One, suggested by some previews, is that the new look and

feel will take getting used to though Ms Reller says that in trials 84% of

people got to grips with it within a day. Another is that Windows 7 has been

popular, so people may be wary of upgrading. And touchscreen adds about $100 to

the cost of a PC, reckons Kirk Yang, who covers technology hardware for

Barclays in Hong Kong. All this may make consumers hesitate before they buy.

Companies are likely to be slower on the uptake than consumers. Many have not

long switched to Windows 7 (or are still using Windows XP, released 11 years

ago). They will be in no hurry to invest in touchscreen PCs or to retrain staff

to use Windows 8. They may, however, be happy to see their staff using tablets

with Office.

Mr Gillett at Forrester thinks that for all these reasons sales may not really

get going until 2014. But he forecasts that by 2016 Microsoft will have over a

quarter of the tablet market and a fair if smaller share of smartphone

operating systems too. The personal-computing market is shifting fast, from

desk-bound to mobile and from mouse-and-keyboard to touch. Microsoft had little

choice but to go mobile. Its chances of success boil down to how much people

care about having more or less the same operating system, tools and content in

the office, on the road and on the sofa, as well as on the quality of what

Microsoft has to offer. It is touch, and go.

from the print edition | Business