Ben Waldman, who heads Microsoft's Mobile Devices Division,
recently offered a rare in-depth look at the "deep understanding of
the wireless space" that he says his company is beginning to
develop. "We certainly haven't been very vocal about our
efforts in this area," he told attendees at this week's Lehman
Brothers Wireless Internet Conference. "But we've spent a lot
of time speaking with our customers, mobile operators, handset
manufacturers and others to understand what they wanted to do with these
devices."
This feedback, Waldman says, has literally transformed
Microsoft's traditional focus on desktop PCs to a more
communications-centric vision--"to empower people through great
software, any time, anywhere, and on any device." Microsoft has
only begun to evolve this vision, he admits, but so far the company has
figured out a few key points:
* Wireless is a three-part problem: To be successful in the
wireless space, says Waldman, "a lot has to come together."
One essential component is access to content--everything from corporate
data on a mainframe to weather and horoscopes. A second critical
component, which he says is "the biggest box," is the carrier,
who provides the middleware infrastructure and "controls the
billing relationship with the customer." And finally there are the
wireless devices themselves, where the critical issues are interface
design and application portability. Microsoft is in a good position to
build end-to-end wireless solutions, Waldman argues, because it's
"the only company with investments and assets in all three areas,
in the content, the servers, and the devices."
* There's no one ideal end-user device: "Whenever I talk
with a customer and ask about what sort of device they want to use to
access the Internet," says Waldman, "the kind of device which
everyone describes is different. And, of course, it's with equal
vehemence that they insist that it's the ideal sort of device that
we have to go ahead and build." In turn, he says, Microsoft has
"learned the hard way" that it can't just shrink down the
Windows interface for small devices; instead, there will probably be
multiple interfaces that are optimized for PDAs, smart phones, and other
handheld devices.
* Corporate e-mail is a killer application: "Seamless access
and secure access to corporate information is one thing that people are
asking for, are crying out for," says Waldman. "And it's
where we think Microsoft is poised to deliver a lot of value."
* Open standards are essential: "We have no intention of
creating or forcing an all-Microsoft solution on people," Waldman
promises. "Each piece of our wireless value chain communicates with
other pieces through Internet standards--so you'll be able to use
non-Microsoft devices to talk to our servers, you'll be able to use
our devices to talk to non-Microsoft servers, and to access our content
or other people's content as well."
* Revenue will come from access fees: Instead of trying to squeeze
money out of OEM licenses and application software, says Waldman,
Microsoft expects to charge monthly "subscriber access
licenses" that wireless carriers will pass on to their customers.
When the carriers see that Microsoft will help them generate higher
billings, Waldman adds, "they'll certainly be willing to share
part of that upside with us."
Ben Waldman, vice president, Mobil Devices Division, Microsoft, One
Microsoft Way, Redmond, Wash. 98052; 425/882-8080.
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