Gizmodo

  • Gizmodo
  • bestmodo
  • lifehacker
  • kotaku
Profile logout login
81 Places I'd Love to See the PlayStation Move

81 Places I'd Love to See the PlayStation Move #photoshopcontest #playstationmove

The Movie Studios' Big 3D Scam

The Movie Studios' Big 3D Scam #3d #moviestudios

Internet Explorer 9: A Fresh Start, With HTML5

Internet Explorer 9: A Fresh Start, With HTML5 #internetexplorer #internetexplorer9

T-Mobile HSPA+ Speed Test: 3G Gets Pumped Up to 21Mbps

T-Mobile HSPA+ Speed Test: 3G Gets Pumped Up to 21Mbps #tmobile #hspaplus

Memory [Forever]: Bits Never Die

Memory [Forever]: Bits Never Die #memory #memoryforever

Windows Phone 7's Impossible App Mission

Windows Phone 7's Impossible App Mission #windowsphone7 #windowsphone7apps

Screw <i>Avatar</i>, 3D Gaming is What Will Get You to Buy a New TV

Screw Avatar, 3D Gaming is What Will Get You to Buy a New TV #3d #3dgaming

Gizmodo

FAQ. Include # before tag:
#tips, #whitenoise, #broken, #lifechanger, etc.

New York, 2:32 AM
Wed Mar 17
73 posts in the last 24 hours

FR | IT | DE | SP | JP | AU | BR | PL

GIZMODO TEAM

Tip Your Editors:


Editorial Director:
Brian Lam | | Twitter

Editor:
Jason Chen
| AIM | Twitter

Features Editor:
Wilson Rothman
| Twitter

Senior Contributing Editor:
Jesus Diaz
| AIM | Twitter

Senior Associate Editor, Reviews:
Mark Wilson
| AIM | Twitter

Reporters:
Matt Buchanan
| AIM | Twitter
John Herrman
| Twitter
Brian Barrett
| Twitter

Contributing Editors:
Adam Frucci
| Twitter
Kat Hannaford
| Twitter

Contributing Editor, Weekends:
Jack Loftus
| Twitter

Junior Reporter:
Rosa Golijan
| Twitter

Editor-at-Large:
Joel Johnson
| Twitter

Editorial Assistant:
Kyle VanHemert
| Twitter

Contributing Researcher:
Don Nguyen


Interns:
David Chaid

Kevin Lee


Heroes and Friends

Comment Account Questions:


Popular Posts:
Last 24 Hours
Last 7 Days
Last 30 Days

Follow Gizmodo on:
Twitter
Facebook

SUBSCRIBE TO GIZMODO RSS

New: Breaking news and daily top stories via email
9515 Subscribers


Please confirm your birth date:

Please enter a valid date
Please enter your full birth year
This content is restricted.

Joke Of The Week: Microsoft Plans To Charge For Its Mobile Operating System

What's the biggest difference between Microsoft's newest mobile operating system and the Google version that it will be competing against (eventually)?

Microsoft will charge carriers for its OS, while Google is giving Android away for free. (The other big competitors, Apple and RIM, don't license their operating systems to third parties.)

That's just silly. Microsoft is dead in the water in this business. If it wants to get moving again, it needs to do everything it can to help itself. And in mobile software, that means competing with "free" with "free."

Yes, giving a product away for free that Microsoft used to charge for will undermine Microsoft's business model. But that's eroding anyway. And, again, to come from behind in this business, Microsoft needs all the help it can get.

The good news is that Microsoft is so big that its new Windows Phone operating system has almost no chance of making enough money to move the needle anyway. So it might as well join rival Google in giving it away for free, in an effort to drive up device sales and market share.

During Monday's keynote, Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer announced that Microsoft would stick with its current Windows Mobile business model. That is, Microsoft would let handset makers license Windows Phone 7 Series in exchange for a fee.

Why bother?

"I think there's something clean and simple and easy to understand about our model," Ballmer said. "We build something, we sell that thing." He added, "I think it's not only in our best interests, but it's ... a simple model that's easy for developers, handset manufacturers, and our operator partners to deal with, to understand, and to build from."

Maybe so. But the problem is that the amount Microsoft can charge for a smartphone OS license is very low, and probably getting lower.

And even if the smartphone market grows significantly in the next few years, and even if Microsoft can capture a respectable share of the market, it stands to make a very small amount of money selling Windows Phone 7 software.

How little?

Not enough to represent a real growth driver for giant Microsoft. And therefore, not enough to justify charging a license fee — which is surely a deterrent when handset makers like LG, Samsung, HTC, Sony Ericsson, Motorola, and others choose which OS platforms to base their phones on.

To estimate what Microsoft's mobile OS license revenues might look like, we ran the numbers with a variety of license fees, ranging from $5 (if Google's strategy pushed Microsoft's pricing down even lower) to $20 (if an intoxicated gadget maker fell so in love with Windows 7 that it would pay through the nose for it).

• A Microsoft rep wouldn't tell us how much Microsoft's hardware partners pay it to license Windows mobile software, but in the past, it ranged from about $8 to $15 per phone, according to research firm Strategy Analytics.

• We also estimated that the smartphone market would grow to around 250 million devices worldwide in 2011, the first full year that Microsoft's new OS would be on the market, and that it might capture 5% to 15% of the market that first year, or roughly 12.5 million (conservative) to 37.5 million units (aggressive). The smartphone market was about 175 million units in 2009, according to IDC.

The results: Microsoft's mobile revenue from license fees could be as low as $63 million, or as high as $750 million, across all those assumptions.

But a reasonable average is somewhere in the $300 million range, which is less than 0.5% of the $66 billion in revenue that Wall Street expects Microsoft to generate in fiscal 2011.

This suggests that mobile license fees will NOT be a significant growth story for Microsoft any time soon, and that unless our estimates are radically low, charging is a waste of time.

Instead, Microsoft should give Windows Phone software away for free, with the hope that manufacturers will use it to make more Windows phones than they're previously planning to make, that they'll charge lower wholesale prices for them, and that carriers will charge lower retail prices for those phones. That could drive up Microsoft's market share, with little negative effect on Microsoft's financial situation.

So how will Microsoft make money off Windows phones? Beats us. But it has to be a way other than license fees.

The options range from taking a cut from selling mobile applications, to subscription fees for Xbox live and Zune music accounts, to mobile search and display advertising, via Bing and potential ad network acquisitions. Sure, those revenue streams will be minuscule to begin with, too. But they will grow with time, and with a bigger user base, which the no-license-fee phone business should provide.

Or Microsoft could take the route that Apple, Research In Motion, Nokia, Palm, and others take, which is selling their own hardware and software. That can be tricky, but it can also be very lucrative: Apple generated more than $15 billion selling iPhones in 2009.


The author of this post can be contacted at tips@gizmodo.com


Upload an image | Add an image URL ×
×
×
Choose a file to upload:
×
Dsmvwl  Admin  Promote to frontpage Approve user Ban user ×
Loading comments ... -/|\
Earlier discussions Paging in progress... | Other discussions | Show all discussions | Show featured discussions only | Expand all replies Collapse all replies
Start a new discussion
By The Business Insider
Email this
Feb 17, 2010 12:10 PM 765 new visitors33,541 304
Edit » Set to Draft » Invite » Syndicate »

Syndicate this post


Site:
Mode:

sending request
cancel
more about #windows
Hey Microsoft, Don't F*ck Up Windows Phone 7
Leave No Trace: How to Completely Erase Your Hard Drives, SSDs and Thumb Drives
Internet Explorer 9 Won't Run on Windows XP
read more: #windowsphone7, #windows, #stevebalmer, #windowsphone, #windows7phoneseries
 
  • Archives
  • About
  • Advertising
  • Legal
  • Help
  • Report a Bug
  • FAQ
Original material is licensed under a Creative Commons License permitting non-commercial sharing with attribution.

Login

Enter your username and password.

Please enter a username.
Please enter your password.
logging in
Login via Facebook | Sign Up | Forgot Password?

Reset Password

Please enter your email address to have your password reset.

Please enter your email address.
Please enter a valid email address.
requesting password reset

Register

Registering will give you a user profile and the ability to add other users as friends. To become a commenter, however, you need to audition.

Want to know more? Consult the Comment FAQ and legal terms.

Please enter a username.
Please enter a password.
Please confirm your password.
Passwords are not identical.
Please enter a valid email address.
registration sent, waiting for reply

Submit Your Comment

You don't need to login to comment. Just enter your email address below.

See how your address will be displayed in the Comment FAQ.

Please enter a valid email address.
Please enter a valid email address.
logging in

Login with your Facebook or Gizmodo account.

Sign up here.



Send An Invitation

To invite commenters to this page, paste in a list of comma-separated email addresses, and then select send invites.

Please enter at least one email address.
Please use valid email addresses.
Please use unique email addresses.
Please enter fewer addresses.
requesting invites

Send a link

Send a link to this post 'Joke Of The Week: Microsoft Plans To Charge For Its Mobile Operating System' via email:

Please enter your name.
Please enter your email address.
Please enter a valid email address.
Please enter your recipient's email address.
Please enter a valid email address.
Please enter your message.
Sending message